As communities struggle to make sense of mass atrocities, expectations
have increasingly been placed on international criminal courts to
render authoritative historical accounts of episodes of mass violence.
Taking these expectations as its point of departure, this book seeks
to understand international criminal courts through the prism of their
historical function. The book critically examines how such courts
confront the past by constructing historical narratives concerning
both the culpability of the accused on trial and the broader mass
atrocity contexts in which they are alleged to have participated. The
book argues that international criminal courts are host to struggles
for historical justice, discursive contests between different actors
vying for judicial acknowledgement of their interpretations of the
past. By examining these struggles within different institutional
settings, the book uncovers the legitimating qualities of
international criminal judgments. In particular, it illuminates what
tends to be foregrounded and included within, as well as marginalised
and excluded from, the narratives of international criminal courts in
practice. What emerges from this account is a sense of the
significance of thinking about the emancipatory limits and
possibilities of international criminal courts in terms of the
historical narratives that are constructed and contested within and
beyond the courtroom.
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Confronting the Past in International Criminal Courts
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780192586094
Publisert
2021
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Academic UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter