The international criminal court and the crime of aggression ; [international meeting held in Trento in May 2001]
In: International law
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In: International law
World Affairs Online
In: Rivista di diritto internazionale privato e processuale
In: Studi e pubblicazioni 24
In: Pubblicazioni della Facoltà di Scienze politiche
Cover -- Half Title -- Dedication -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- List of Participants -- Editors' Preface -- The Crime of Aggression from Nuremberg to the Rome Statute -- 1. The Historical Background -- 2. Origins of the Criminalization of Aggression: How Crimes Against Peace Became the "Supreme International Crime" -- 3. Will Aggressors Ever be Tried Before the ICC? -- 4. The Debate within the Preparatory Commission for the International Criminal Court -- The International Criminal Court and the Crime of Aggression: Questions of Definition and Jurisdiction -- 5. The Definition of the Crime of Aggression and the ICC Jurisdiction over that Crime -- 6. Aggression and the ICC: Views on Certain Ideas and their Potential for a Solution -- 7. Defining the Crime of Aggression or Redefining Aggression? -- 8. Definition of the Crime of Aggression: State Responsibility or Individual Criminal Responsibility? -- 9. The Crime of Aggression: Definitional Options for the Way Forward -- 10. The Exercise of the International Criminal Court's Jurisdiction over the Crime of Aggression: Short Term and Long Term Prospects -- The Crime of Aggression and the Relationship between the International Criminal Court and the Security Council -- 11. The Respective Roles of the ICC and the Security Council in Determining the Existence of an Aggression -- 12. Reflections on the Role of the Security Council in Determining an Act of Aggression -- 13. The ICC and the Security Council on Aggression: Overlapping Competencies? -- 14. The ICC and the Security Council: About the Argument of Politicization -- 15. Conclusions Générales -- Afterword The International Criminal Court and the Crime of Aggression: From the Preparatory Commission to the Assembly of States Parties and Beyond -- 16. An Outsider's View -- 17. An Insider's View -- Index.
part THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT: ITS MAIN FEATURES -- chapter 1 Some Reflections on the Rome Conference -- chapter 2 The Rome Statute of the ICC: Rays of Light and Some Shadows -- chapter 3 The Experience of the Preparatory Committee -- chapter 4 The International Criminal Court in Perspective: From the Rome Conference to the Years to Come -- chapter 5 The International Criminal Court: The Role of the Security Council -- chapter 6 The Role of the Security Council and the Independence of the International Criminal Court: Some Reflections -- chapter 7 The Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court: Exceptions to the Jurisdiction -- chapter 8 The Role of the Prosecutor -- chapter 9 The International Criminal Court: Jurisdiction, Trigger Mechanism and Relationship to National Jurisdictions -- part THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT AND THE INTERNATIONAL PROTECTION OF HUMAN RIGHTS -- chapter 10 Introductory Remarks -- chapter 11 The Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court and Human Rights -- chapter 12 Crimes Against Humanity and the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court -- chapter 13 War Crimes in International Armed Conflicts -- chapter 14 War Crimes and Internal Conflicts in the Statute of the International Criminal Court -- chapter 15 The Protection of Children's Rights in the Statute of the International Criminal Court -- chapter 16 The Status of the Individual in the Statute of the International Criminal Court -- chapter 17 State's Crime and Individuals' Crimes: What Relationship? -- part THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM AFTER THE ROME CONFERENCE -- chapter 18 The Preventive and the Repressive Function of the International Criminal Court -- chapter 19 The International Criminal Court and National Jurisdictions -- chapter 20 Follow up to Rome: Preparing for Entry into Force of the Statute of the International Criminal Court -- chapter 21 Current Political Developments and their Impact on the Future of the International Criminal Court -- chapter 22 The Obligation to Cooperate with the International Criminal Court and States not Party to the Statute -- chapter 23 Observations on the Appeal before the International Criminal Court -- chapter 24 Some Remarks on the Settlement of Disputes in the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court -- chapter 25 The Status of Third States before the International Criminal Court -- chapter 26 Criminally Protected Legal Interests at the International Level after the Rome Statute -- part PROSPECTS FOR THE FUNCTIONING OF THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT -- chapter 27 Some Practical Remarks on the Early Functioning of the International Criminal Court -- chapter 28 Scenarios of Implementation of the Statute of the International Criminal Court -- chapter 29 Round Table: Prospects for the Functioning of the International Criminal Court -- chapter 30 Conclusions.
In: The journal of conflict studies: journal of the Centre for Conflict Studies, University of New Brunswick, Band 25, Heft 2, S. 159-160
ISSN: 1198-8614
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Working paper