<i>Breaking the Cycle of Mass Atrocities</i> is a welcome addition to the literature, and should be of interest to scholars and students interested in socio-legal approaches to international criminal law.
- Lynn Rapaport, Pomona College, Criminal Law and Criminal Justice Books
PART I
CYCLE OF MASS ATROCITIES
1. Introduction: Breaking the Cycle of Mass Atrocities: Criminological and Socio-Legal Approaches to International Criminal Law
Marina Aksenova
2. The Biology and Psychology of Atrocity and the Erasure of Memory
Christopher Harding
PART II
CRIMINALISATION
3. International Criminalisation as a Pragmatic Institutional Process: The Cases of Dominic Ongwen at the International Criminal Court and Thomas Kwoyelo at the International Crimes Division in the Situation
in Uganda
Matilde Gawronski
4. Solidarity as a Moral and Legal Basis for Crimes Against Humanity: A Durkheimian Perspective
Marina Aksenova
PART III
TRIAL AND PUNISHMENT
5. The Hybrid System of International Criminal Law: A Work in Progress or Just a Noble Experiment?
Colleen Rohan
6. Agents and Agency in International Criminal Law: Intent and the ‘Special Part’ of International Criminal Law
Kerstin Bree Carlson
7. Punishment in Transition: Empirical Comparison of Post-Genocide Sentencing Practices in Rwandan Domestic Courts and at the ICTR
Barbora Holá and Amani Chibashimba
PART IV
RE-ENTRY OF VICTIMS AND PERPETRATORS
8. Not in Our Name! Visions of Community in International Criminal Justice
Milena Tripkovic
9. Explaining (Away) Individual Agency: A Criminological Take on Direct Perpetrator Re-Presentations at the ICTY
Anette Bringedal Houge
PART V
PREVENTION
10. Social Identity and International Crimes: Legitimate and Problematic Aspects of the ‘Ordinary People’ Hypothesis
Stefan Harrendorf
11. Regional Criminal Justice, Corporate Criminal Liability and the Need for Non-Doctrinal Research
Elies van Sliedregt
EPILOGUE
12. Breaking the Cycle of Collective Violence: International Criminal Law’s Contribution
Harmen van der Wilt
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
Marina Aksenova is Professor of Comparative and International Criminal Law at IE University in Madrid.
Elies van Sliedregt is Professor of International and Comparative Criminal Law at Leeds University.
Stephan Parmentier is Professor of Criminal Law and Criminology at KU Leuven.