International Justice
In: "International Justice", in Jean d'Aspremont & Sahib Singh, Fundamental Concepts for International Law- The Construction of a Discipline, Oxford University Press (2017).
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In: "International Justice", in Jean d'Aspremont & Sahib Singh, Fundamental Concepts for International Law- The Construction of a Discipline, Oxford University Press (2017).
SSRN
In: 56 Virginia Journal of International Law, Forthcoming
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In: Meždunarodnye processy: žurnal teorii meždunarodnych otnošenij i mirovoj politiki = International trends : journal of theory of international relations and world politics, Band 14, Heft 4(47)
In: Challenges of globalisation
"There is much debate about the scope of international law, its compatibility with individual state practice, its enforceability and the recent and limited degree to which it is institutionalized. This collection of essays seeks to address the issue of access to justice, the related element of domestic rule of law which does not yet figure significantly in debates about international rule of law. Even in cases in which laws are passed, institutions are present and key players are ethically committed to the rule of law, those whom the laws are intended to protect may be unable to secure protection. This is an issue in most domestic jurisdictions but also one which poses severe problems for international justice worldwide. The book will be of interest to academics and practitioners of international law, environmental law, transitional justice, international development, human rights, ethics, international relations and political theory"--
In: Economics as Applied Ethics, S. 227-248
In: Political and legal anthropology review: PoLAR, Band 42, Heft 2, S. 244-267
ISSN: 1555-2934
AbstractThis article contributes to contemporary debates in the anthropology of international justice by exploring how narratives about the International Criminal Court have been applied, understood, and contested. It traces the way that justice is materialized and made legible as a domain of practice that is predicated on deeply embedded racialized logics, which are themselves obscured in the process. The article focuses on how bodies, psychologies, and social imaginaries come together to produce the terms on which justice is materialized, disaggregated, ruptured, and made legible again. This is demonstrated through the introduction of "affective justice" as a framework for understanding justice as a social practice. Through several ethnographic examples, this article illuminates how embodied affects at the micro level underpin emotional regimes that are expressed in a diversity of social practices, which then have a collective capacity to influence notions of justice at the macro level. The examples illuminate how international justice assemblages interact to constitute affective justice in three interrelated domains: technocratic practices, psycho‐social embodied performances, and emotional regimes. When examined through anthropology of international justice lenses, each of these domains offers insights into how people draw upon racial imaginaries to produce and refashion justice through practice.
In: CODESRIA Policy Briefs No. 1 (March 2015)
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In: Africa Today, Band 63, Heft 4, S. 45
In: Tan , N F 2015 , ' Prabowo and the shortcomings of international justice ' , Griffith Journal of Law & Human Dignity , vol. 3 , no. 1 , pp. 103-117 .
On 9 July 2014, Joko Widodo became Indonesia's seventh president, winning the election by around six percentage points. The man he defeated, Prabowo Subianto, is suspected of committing a range of human rights offences in Java in 1997–1998. Even though Prabowo failed to win the presidency, his strong candidacy highlights the ongoing impunity for perpetrators of serious human rights violations in Indonesia. Despite a human rights court being legislated for in Indonesia, it has yet to convict a single case or prosecute past human rights abuses by state officials. While Prabowo's crimes may come under the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court, temporal jurisdiction renders prosecution impossible. This article explores Prabowo's human rights abuses, and how international criminal law has failed to achieve justice for these crimes. It concludes that Prabowo's political rise threatens the aims of international criminal justice.
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In: [Les livres de droit de l'Académie]
In: Peace review: the international quarterly of world peace, Band 27, Heft 3, S. 337
ISSN: 1040-2659
In: Peace review: peace, security & global change, Band 27, Heft 3, S. 337-345
ISSN: 1469-9982