Staatsverbrechen und Internationale Justiz (State Crimes and International Criminal Tribunals)
In: Archiv des Völkerrechts, Volume 45, Issue 3, p. 382-399
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In: Archiv des Völkerrechts, Volume 45, Issue 3, p. 382-399
SSRN
In: Princeton Studies in International History and Politics
International justice has become a crucial part of the ongoing political debates about the future of shattered societies like Bosnia, Kosovo, Rwanda, Cambodia, and Chile. Why do our governments sometimes display such striking idealism in the face of war crimes and atrocities abroad, and at other times cynically abandon the pursuit of international justice altogether? Why today does justice seem so slow to come for war crimes victims in the Balkans? In this book, Gary Bass offers an unprecedented look at the politics behind international war crimes tribunals, combining analysis with investig.
In: 3rd Annual Victoria University Symposium on Human Rights, Wellington, 2005
SSRN
In: International politics, Volume 35, Issue 1, p. 1-30
ISSN: 1384-5748
World Affairs Online
In: Survey of current affairs, Volume 30, Issue 2, p. 46-47
ISSN: 0039-6214
In: American journal of international law: AJIL, Volume 100, Issue 3, p. 551-579
ISSN: 2161-7953
Just over sixty years ago, the international community, seeking to heal the wounds of a brutal war, embarked on a bold legal experiment. For the first time in history, legal mechanisms were invoked to bring to justice the perpetrators of war crimes and crimes against humanity in international tribunals specifically established for that purpose. The trials at Nuremberg and Tokyo were extraordinary and risky; and, above all, unique in their time.
In: Frontiers: a journal of women studies, Volume 2, Issue 1, p. 131
ISSN: 1536-0334
In: Transition: events and issues in the former Soviet Union and East-Central and Southeastern Europe, Volume 2, Issue 14, p. 51-53
ISSN: 1211-0205
Ziel des Internationalen Kriegsverbrecher-Tribunals für das ehemalige Jugoslawien in Den Haag ist es, über die individuelle Anklage und Verurteilung von Kriegsverbrechern den Teufelskreis von Gewalt und Rache zu durchbrechen. In den Zuständigkeitsbereich des Tribunals fallen schwerwiegende Verstöße gegen die Genfer Konvention, Verstöße gegen das Kriegsrecht, Verbrechen gegen die Menschlichkeit und Völkermord. Die Verfasserin stellt Einberufung, personelle Besetzung, Arbeitsweise und Kompetenz des Tribunals dar. Sie diskutiert Prinzipien eines fairen Verfahrens und setzt sich mit den Problemen der Auswahl der zu behandelnden Fälle, des Schutzes von Zeugen und der Verhaftung von Angeklagten auseinander. (BIOst-Wpt)
World Affairs Online
In: American journal of international law, Volume 100, p. 551-579
ISSN: 0002-9300
World Affairs Online
World Affairs Online
AbstractThe Therapeutic Turn in International Humanitarian Law: War Crimes Tribunals as Sites of "Healing"? by Diana Elizabeth Anders Doctor of Philosophy in Rhetoric Designate Designated Emphasis in Women, Gender, and SexualityUniversity of California, Berkeley Professor Judith Butler, Co-Chair Professor David Cohen, Co-Chair This dissertation examines the growing tendency to figure international war crimes tribunals in terms of their therapeutic value for their victims. My project documents and questions how the discourse of juridical healing emerged from what I term "the therapeutic turn" in international humanitarian law (hereafter, IHL). I analyze this phenomenon in terms of its key features, conditions of possibility, modes of legitimization, and effects, focusing on legal institutions designed to adjudicate crimes such as genocide, mass rape, and torture. My central argument is that the rhetoric of juridical healing, despite its commendable achievements, comes at an important cost, in that the appeal to law can invite new forms of regulation and domination. In short, this novel form of justice produces and authorizes its own forms of violence. It does so in part by obscuring the political effects of the law's promise to heal. To bring this uncomfortable fact into relief is but a first step towards countering such ill effects. This project focuses on the first two international ad hoc tribunals -- the International Criminal Tribunals for the former Yugoslavia and the International Tribunal for Rwanda -- as well as the International Criminal Court (hereafter, the ICTY, the ICTR, and the ICC). All were established in the 1990s in the beginning of what has been called the "tribunal era," which has ushered in an unprecedented emphasis on victims of atrocity. Primarily by means of discourse analysis, I examine court documents and trial transcripts, as well as relevant statements made by diplomats, politicians, court officials, scholars, and non-governmental-organizations. Such analysis aims to chart the expansion of a new norm of justice as healing that has so far largely gone unrecognized. Chapter One outlines the general problem of the dissertation, introducing the phenomenon of juridical healing and situating it historically. Although such healing has become a powerful, even normative trope in humanitarian discourse, it has not been well defined. The chapter raises questions concerning what juridical healing can realistically achieve, and how it might constitute a new mode of power that paternalistically regulates the very subjects it pledges to heal. It also examines how the special status of healing discourse as "above reproach" has shielded it from critical scrutiny. Chapter Two surveys the growing scholarly discourse on juridical healing, arguing that such inquiries tend to uncritically accept the core terms of the therapeutic turn. This work can thus serve to reify the problematic notion of healing promulgated elsewhere. Such thinking holds that tribunals can occasion forms of "catharsis" and "closure," both for individual victim-witnesses and more broadly. I argue that this belief in "disclosure for closure" forecloses critical reflection on the effects of juridical healing, or on alternatives to this conception. In Chapter Three, I develop a genealogy of juridical healing in relation to new legal institutions. I analyze how the promise of healing has served as a means of legitimization, even as it has led courts into uncharted legal territory. Even as the tribunals of the 1990s derived their credibility from the Nuremberg and Tokyo tribunals that followed World War II, they also had to distance themselves from the accusation that the latter had only dispensed "victors' justice." In an uncanny echo, recent tribunals can be said to have produced forms of "victims' justice." I examine how such rhetoric threatens to undermine the same credibility that it otherwise means to establish, even at the cost of the victims it purportedly champions. Chapter Four considers the tribunals' adjudication of sexual violence as a war crime. Here I use individual case studies to show the unforeseen costs of such procedures. I examine how the female victim of sexual violence is effectively condemned to victimhood by the very discourse that promises to heal her, but denies her meaningful agency. At the same time, "other" victims of wartime sexual violence--such as men, boys, or women from the "enemy camp"--are marginalized. My analyses of these cases explore how therapeutic-juridical interventions can undermine their avowed aims, while concealing the power relations on which they rely and which they perpetuate. The final chapter is based on fieldwork that I carried out in 2009 in The Hague, Netherlands, and examines the depoliticizing effects of juridical healing. Drawing on interviews with ICTY and ICC officials, the chapter outlines the temporal and spatial coordinates of the rhetoric of healing. I focus on the ways in which such rhetoric enacts movements of deferral and displacement, and thus neutralizes potential forms of political activity. As an alternative, I examine Hannah Arendt's account of politics, which is centered on collective, participatory action and antagonistic debate. Such a view allows us to imagine a more capable subject of politics, one with the potential to recover, resist, and revolt. The Epilogue evaluates the current and future implications of the rhetoric of healing, exploring alternative responses to extreme violence. I claim that juridical healing can be understood as the latest "last utopia" or the least "lesser evil" in a time when "human rights" and "humanitarianism" have become increasingly wed to military interventions. I proceed to trace additional contradictions in the discourse of juridical healing, in that contemporary IHL also identifies with the ideology of militarized humanitarianism in its endorsement of the UN doctrine of "Responsibility to Protect." I close by suggesting that juridical healing presents the international community with an aporia that might ultimately be generative, insofar as it produces conditions under which the very politics it stifles might also be aroused. By rethinking and reframing this rhetoric, I hope to indicate avenues for differently imagining and producing the future--a future not destined to repeat or be dictated by the violence, injustice, and pain of the past.
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In: FP, p. 72-85
ISSN: 0015-7228
Examines differences between the current Yugoslav war crimes tribunal and those held at Tokyo, Japan and Nuremberg, Germany after World War II; some focus on administrative problems.
In: The world today, Volume 49, p. 194-197
ISSN: 0043-9134
Discusses provisions of Security Council Resolution 827/93 of May 25, 1993, establishing a war crimes tribunal for the former Yugoslavia.