ISSN: 1478-1387, EISSN: 1478-1395
The Journal of International Criminal Justice aims to promote a profound collective reflection on the new problems facing international law.
Established by a group of distinguished criminal lawyers and international lawyers, the Journal addresses the major problems of justice from the angle of law, jurisprudence, criminology, penal philosophy, and the history of international judicial institutions.
It is intended for graduate and post-graduate students, practitioners, academics, government officials, as well as the hundreds of people working for international criminal courts.
CONTENIDO
Current Events
The Procedure for Appointing the International Criminal Court Prosecutor: High Moral Character and the Need for Comprehensive Vetting
Angela Mudukuti
Articles
Prosecute Little Fish at the ICC
Ward Ferdinandusse, Alex Whiting
The Professional Market of International Criminal Justice: Divisions of Labour and Patterns of Elite Reproduction
Mikkel Jarle Christensen
International Prosecutors as Cause Lawyers
Alex Batesmith
Implementing Reparations in the Al Mahdi Case: A Story of Monumental Challenges in Timbuktu
Marina Lostal
Symposium
Who is Afraid of the International Criminal Court? Deterrence in International Criminal Justice
Foreword
Shai Dothan, Jakob v H Holtermann, Astrid Kjeldgaard-Pedersen
The Anti-deterrence Hypothesis: What if International Criminal Justice Encouraged Crime?
Frédéric Mégret
The ICC Is NOT a Slice of Cheese
Shai Dothan
In Defence of a Metaphor: A Reply to Shai Dothan’s Critique of Applying the Swiss Cheese Model on Deterrence to the International Criminal Court
Jakob v H Holtermann
Exploring the International Criminal Court’s Deterrent Potential: A Case Study of Australian Politics
Natalie Hodgson
Is the Quality of the ICC’s Legal Reasoning an Obstacle to Its Ability to Deter International Crimes?
Astrid Kjeldgaard-Pedersen
Conflict Actors and the International Criminal Court in Colombia
Hyeran Jo, Beth A Simmons, Mitchell Radtke
Coercion at the ICC: A Rationalist International Relations Perspective
Marc Schack
Who is Afraid of the Crime of Aggression?
Kevin Jon Heller
Could the Crime of Aggression Undermine Deterrence?
Alex Whiting
Epilogue: Some Musings on Deterrence
Mark A Drumbl
Book Reviews
The Crime of Aggression, Humanity, and the Soldier
Sergey Sayapin
Margaret deGuzman, Shocking the Conscience of Humanity: Gravity and the Legitimacy of International Criminal Law
Marco Longobardo