Exporting Peace? The EU Mediator's Normative Backpack
In: European Law Open (2022), 1, 26–59 (Cambridge University Press)
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In: European Law Open (2022), 1, 26–59 (Cambridge University Press)
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In: The British yearbook of international law, Band 87, Heft 1, S. 262-269
ISSN: 2044-9437
In: University of Cambridge Faculty of Law Research Paper No. 44/2017
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Working paper
In: Forthcoming in Tony Karbo and Kudrat Virk (eds.), Towards a New Pax Africana: Making, Keeping, and Building Peace in the Post-Cold War Era
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In: Oxford Handbook of the Theory of International Law, Forthcoming
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In: Legal Equality and the International Rule of Law: Essays in Honour of P. H. Kooijmans, 43 Netherlands Yearbook of International Law 2012
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Working paper
In: University of Cambridge Faculty of Law Research Paper No. 44/2013
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Working paper
In: Proceedings of the annual meeting / American Society of International Law, Band 107, S. 330-335
ISSN: 2169-1118
In: University of Cambridge Faculty of Law Research Paper No. 22/2012
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Working paper
In: Internationale spectator, Band 62, Heft 7-8, S. 435-437
ISSN: 0020-9317
In: Internationale spectator, Band 62, Heft 12, S. 689-690
ISSN: 0020-9317
In: Internationale spectator, Band 61, Heft 9, S. 455-457
ISSN: 0020-9317
In: Hague Yearbook for International Law, Band 19, S. 113-134
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In: Internationale spectator, Band 61, Heft 11, S. 573
ISSN: 0020-9317
In: Cambridge studies in law and scoiety
"Of the many expectations attending the creation of the first permanent International Criminal Court, the greatest has been that the principle of complementarity would catalyse national investigations and prosecutions of conflict-related crimes and lead to the reform of domestic justice systems. Sarah Nouwen explores whether complementarity has had such an effect in two states subject to ICC intervention: Uganda and Sudan. Drawing on extensive empirical research and combining law, legal anthropology and political economy, she unveils several effects and outlines the catalysts for them. However, she also reveals that one widely anticipated effect - an increase in domestic proceedings for conflict-related crimes - has barely occurred. This finding leads to the unravelling of paradoxes that go right to the heart of the functioning of an idealistic Court in a world of real constraints"--