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World Affairs Online
Transnational Legal Orders of Criminal Justice. By Gregory Shaffer and Ely Aaronson. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2020. Pp. xvi, 394. Index
In: American journal of international law: AJIL, Band 115, Heft 4, S. 772-777
ISSN: 2161-7953
Immigration Trials and International Crimes: Expressing Justice and Performing Race
In: N Palmer, 'Immigration Trials and International Crimes: Expressing Justice and Performing Race', Theoretical Criminology 25 (2) (2021)
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International Criminal Law and Border Control: The Expressive Role of the Deportation and Extradition of Genocide Suspects to Rwanda
In: N Palmer, 'International Criminal Law and Border Control: The expressive role of the deportation and extradition of genocide suspects to Rwanda', 33 (3) (2020)
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The Place of Consultation in the International Criminal Court's Approach to Complementarity and Cooperation
In: King's College London Law School Research Paper No. 2016-05
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Working paper
Re-Examining Resistance in Post-Genocide Rwanda
In: Journal of Eastern African Studies (2014) 8 (2) 231-245
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Transfer or Transformation?: A Review of the Rule 11 Bis Decisions of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda
In: The African Journal of International and Comparative Law (2012) 20 (1), 1-21
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Understandings of International Law in Rwanda: A Contextual Approach
In: Chapter contribution in 'International Law in Domestic Courts: Rule of Law Reform in Post-Conflict States' E Kristjansdottir, A Nollkaemper and C Ryngaert (eds) (Brussels: Intersentia Publishing 2012)
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Book Review: The Nuremberg Military Tribunals and the Origins of International Criminal Law (Kevin Jon Heller), (Oxford University Press, 2011)
In: European Human Rights Law Review, 2 (2012)
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What Can We Learn from the Household Electricity Survey?
The reasons for high carbon emissions from domestic buildings are complex, and have both social and technical dimensions. At the same time, it is costly and very time-consuming to gather reliable data on energy use in the home. The authors had early access to data from the Household Electricity Survey—the most detailed survey of electricity consumption in UK homes ever undertaken—which monitored 250 homes. The data enabled the authors to investigate a series of socio-technical questions drawn up by the UK Government: Why do some households use far more energy than average, whereas others use much less? What potential is there for shifting "peak load" so that electricity demand is more even through the day? Why is base load electricity use so high? The answers were seldom definitive, but statistical tests found significant correlations between high electricity use and social grade, large household size, unemployment and middle age; and between low electricity use and single-person households, small dwellings, and retirement. This paper draws out key findings from the work, and examines how these insights affect our broader understanding of carbon emissions from the built environment.
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Rethinking the 'International Law of Crime': Provocations from Transnational Legal Studies
In: Transnational Legal Theory (2015) 5 (4)
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Family Justice Centres: A Model for Empowerment?
In: International Review of Victimology (May 2014) 20 (2) 191-210
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Challenging Transitional Justice
In: Critical Perspectives in Transitional Justice (Brussels: Intersentia Publishing 2012)
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Working paper
Introduction: Ways of Knowing Atrocity: A Methodological Enquiry into the Formulation, Implementation, and Assessment of Transitional Justice
In: Canadian journal of law and society: Revue canadienne de droit et société, Band 30, Heft 2, S. 173-182
ISSN: 1911-0227
Ways of Knowing Atrocity: A Methodological Enquiry into the Formulation, Implementation and Assessment of Transitional Justice
In: (2015) 30 (2) Canadian Journal of Law and Society
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