Statualità e non riconoscimento nel diritto internazionale
In: Studi di diritto internazionale 22
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In: Studi di diritto internazionale 22
In: Rivista di diritto internazionale, 2023, no. 2
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In: Italian Yearbook of International Law, Band 31, S. 263-275
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In: Italian Yearbook of International Law, vol. XXX (2021)
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In: The Italian Yearbook of International Law Online, Band 27, Heft 1, S. 259-281
ISSN: 2211-6133
During 2017, the Italian Government adopted a series of controversial measures in order to stem the increasing flow of migrants from Libya, with the full backing of the European Union. The Memorandum of Understanding between Italy and the Libyan Government of National Accord of 2 February 2017 provided the legal basis for most of them. In actual fact, those measures rapidly led to a significant reduction in the number of migrants arriving in Italy, while increasing that of migrants intercepted at sea by the Libyan Coast Guard and transferred to the detention centres managed by the Libyan Department for Combatting Illegal Immigration. As a result, the already inhuman conditions of detention therein further worsened. This article investigates whether and to what extent Italy can be held responsible under international law for human rights violations against migrants on Libyan soil and, at the hands of the Libyan Coast Guard, at sea. It is submitted that, owing to the active support to the Libyan Coast Guard and the adoption of a code of conduct restricting NGOs' search and rescue activities, Italy is complicit in violations of the prohibition of torture and ill-treatment against migrants intercepted at sea and forcibly returned to Libya. It is also stressed that Italy would be responsible for directly violating the prohibition on torture and ill-treatment enshrined in Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights, if it were ascertained that Italian military personnel exercise de facto control over Libyan Coast Guard vessels transporting migrants back to Libyan territory. In the light of this, the author highlights the urgent need for the Italian Government to rethink its migration control policy, amending the said Memorandum of Understanding and modifying the aforementioned measures so as to prioritise the protection of migrants' fundamental human rights.
In: POCAR (ed), The Additional Protocols 40 Years Later: New Conflicts, New Actors, New Perspectives, IIHL, Milan, FrancoAngeli, 2018, 85-94.
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In: The Italian Yearbook of International Law Online, Band 26, Heft 1, S. 624-629
ISSN: 2211-6133
In: Italian Yearbook of International Law, Band 27, S. 259-281
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In: Ordine internazionale e diritti umani, ISSN 2284-3531, no. 1/2016
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In: Nordic journal of international law, Band 81, Heft 2, S. 227-248
ISSN: 1571-8107
At the first Review Conference of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, which was held in Kampala in 2010, the negotiations on the crime of aggression resulted in a complex package, at the core of which are the definition of the crime and the conditions for the exercise of the Court's jurisdiction over it. This article examines the definition of the crime of aggression, as enshrined in the new Article 8 bis, considering the various parts of that package as well as the existing practice and case law. On the basis of this analysis, it evaluates the relevance of the Kampala definition to the evolution of customary international law.
In: European journal of international law, Band 23, Heft 2, S. 594-597
ISSN: 0938-5428
In: Nordic Journal of International Law, Band 81, Heft 2
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In: Italian Yearbook of International Law, Vol. XXI-2011
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In: The Italian Yearbook of International Law Online, Band 21, Heft 1, S. 85-109
ISSN: 2211-6133
In: Istituto Affari Internazionali Documenti No. 11/03
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Working paper