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In: International theory: a journal of international politics, law and philosophy, Volume 14, Issue 3, p. 460-502
ISSN: 1752-9727
This article examines international criminalization, the process by which particular acts come to be established as international crimes in world politics. While international legal scholars suggest international criminalization constitutes a legal process that centres on international legal codification, this article argues, by drawing upon the insights of constructivist International Relations scholarship, that it is better conceived as a social process. More specifically, the process of international criminalization involves the development of an international social consensus on international criminality, which takes hold in international society following diplomatic negotiations between social actors. Furthermore, international criminalization embraces a two-stage process that requires, firstly, the emergence of an international criminal norm and secondly, the translation of that norm into an international legal proscription. Using these conceptual insights, the article analyses, through a close analysis of international archival documents, the historical emergence of genocide, in order to demonstrate how its proposed conceptualization of international criminalization can better explain how and why this act was specifically established as an international crime. In doing so, the article offers an alternative account of genocide's criminalization which, unlike the existing literature, goes some way towards uncovering the processes of social construction that informed its establishment as an international crime.
World Affairs Online
In: AIC conference proceedings 27
In: International observer, Volume 31, Issue 507, p. 5367-5380
ISSN: 1061-0324
In: International observer, Volume 17, Issue 332, p. 916-920
ISSN: 1061-0324
In: International observer, Volume 17, Issue 334, p. 947
ISSN: 1061-0324
In: International Affairs, Volume 8, Issue 1, p. 88-88
ISSN: 1468-2346
In: International Affairs
ISSN: 1468-2346
In: Aus Politik und Zeitgeschichte: APuZ, Volume 38, Issue 49, p. 35-44
ISSN: 0479-611X
World Affairs Online
In: Edition Dienstleistungsmanagement Ser
Intro -- Inhaltsverzeichnis -- Abkürzungsverzeichnis -- Vorbemerkungen -- 1. Der internationale Tourismus als Erscheinungsform des Tourismus -- 2. Der historische Aspekt des internationalen Tourismus -- 3. Entwicklungen im Welttourismus -- 4. Die Entwicklungen auf dem europäischen Tourismusmarkt -- 5. Die Stellung Deutschlands im internationalen Tourismus -- 6. Die internationalen Tourismusorganisationen, ihre Wirkungsweise und Aufgaben -- Literaturverzeichnis -- Sachwortverzeichnis
The arbitration is a method of resolving disputes through an arbitration tribunal composed of one or several arbitrators. He allows resolving a dispute under a sentence delivered after an arbitration procedure in which all parties have to prove what they adduce to convince the tribunal. It is by using various modes of proof inspired specially from the system of Common Law and the system of Civil Law that parties can achieve this purpose.On the other hand, because the international arbitration has neither a territory nor legislation, it was created a system which combines between best practices of Common Law and Civil Law. So, the written evidence is produced according to the practice of Civil Law which gives primacy to a proof written in advance. But for the oral testimony, it is the common Law which dominates the administration of this proof by giving parties the right to nominate and interrogate witnesses. This is also what happens when arbitrators decide to use an expertise in which the parties have the power to nominate experts and interrogate them as witnesses. So, the evidence in international arbitration can be divided into written evidence made up by the writing on paper medium and electronic medium and oral evidence formed by proof by witness and proof by expertise. ; L'arbitrage est un mode de résolution des litiges par l'intermédiaire d'un tribunal arbitral composé d'un ou plusieurs arbitres. Il permet, comme devant les tribunaux étatiques, de régler un litige en vertu d'une sentence rendue à l'issue d'une procédure arbitrale dans laquelle chacune des parties doit prouver ce qu'elle allègue afin d'établir la conviction des arbitres. C'est par le recours aux divers modes de preuve inspirés des différents systèmes juridiques notamment du système de Common Law et du système de droit civil que les plaideurs pourront atteindre cette finalité.En revanche, parce que l'arbitrage international ne possède ni for ni législation spéciaux, l'administration des preuves dans une instance arbitrale internationale ...
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