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REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT: Asyl i Norden. - p. 89-101 - Köbenhavn : Dansk Flygtningehjaelp, 1990.
REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT: Essays on ICTY procedure and evidence in honour of gabrielle Kirk McDonald / May, D. ... [et al.] - (International humanitarian law series ; vol. 3), p. 249-358. - Hague : Kluwer Law, 2001.
ABSTRACT: Evidence before the ICTY; R. May, M. Wierda. 21. Admissibility of evidence under the Rules of Procedure and Evidence of the ICTY: development of the `flexibility principle'; G. Boas. 22. Rule 89(c) and (D): at odds or overlapping with Rule 96 and Rule 95? P. Viseur Sellers. 23. Hearsay evidence; A. Rodrigues, C. Tournaye. 24. Discovery: mutual disclosure, unilateral disclosure and non-disclosure under the Rules of Procedure and Evidence; R. Pruitt. 25. The disclosure of exculpatory material by the Prosecution to the Defence under Rule 68 of the ICTY Rules; M.B. Harmon, M. Karagiannakis. 26. Judicial notice; E. O'Sullivan. 27. Precedent in the practice of the ICTY; C. Harris.
REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT: Essays on ICTY procedure and evidence in honour of gabrielle Kirk McDonald / May, D. ... [et al.] - (International humanitarian law series ; vol. 3), p. 459-524. - Hague : Kluwer Law, 2001.
ABSTRACT: 34. Interlocutory appeals before the ICTY; J. Hocking. 35. The ambit of the powers under Article 25 of the ICTY Statue: three issues of recent interest; R. Nieto-Navia, B. Roche. 36. Additional evidence in the appeals proceedings and review of final judgement; Y.M.O. Featherstone. 37. Are administrative decisions from the Registry appealable? C. Rohde.
The weighing of evidence in a dual national case at the Iran-United States Claims Tribunal : a case comment (Nazari and the government of the Islamic Republic of Iran / Mathias, D.S.
Terrorism: protection of witnesses and collaborators of justice / Piacente, Nicola (report by), 403 p.. - Strasbourg : Council of Europe Publ., 2006.
ABSTRACT: Contents:. 1. Analytical report. 2. Situation in member and observer states of the Council of Europe. Questionnaire on protection of witnesses and “pentiti” In relation to acts of terrorism. Armenia. Austria. Azerbaijan. Belgium. Bosnia and Herzegovina. Czech Republic. Finland. France. Georgia. Germany. Greece. Hungary. Italy. Latvia. Lithuania. Luxembourg. Moldova. The Netherlands. Norway. Poland. Portugal. Russian Federation. Spain. Sweden. Switzerland. "the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia". Turkey. United States of America. Japan. Recommendation Rec(2005)9 of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe to member states on the protection of witnesses and collaborators of justice.
Rikosprosessi lapsiin kohdistuvissa seksuaalirikoksissa / Hirvelä, Päivi, 590 p.. - Tampere : WSOYpro, 2006.
Straffprocessrätt för polisutbildningen / Helminen, Klaus - (Poliisikoulun julkaisuja, Oppikirjat 5), 272 p.. - Helsinki : Poliisikoulu, 2006.
ABSTRACT: Contents:. 1. Straffprocess: begrepp och källor. 2. Myndigheterna. 3. Parterna och deras företrädare. 4. Åklagarens uppgifter. 5. Brottmålsrättegången i huvuddrag. 6. Domstolens domar och beslut, rättsmedlen. 7. Straffprocessuella principer. 8. Bevisning. 9. Förenklade straffprocessarter. 10. Förundersökning: grundfrågor och syftemål. 11. Förundersökningsmyndigheterna. 12. Parterna och deras företrädare samt andra privatpersoner vid förundersökning. 13. Genomförande av förundersökning. 14. Förhör och protokoll. 15. Allmänna förundersökningsprinciper. 16. De straffprocessuella tvångsmedlen: allmänt. 17. Tvångsmedel som riktas mot frihet. 18. Tvångsmedel som riktas mot andra rättsgoda.
Theory and practice of international and internationalized criminal proceedings / Knoops, Geert-Jan Alexander - (European and international law series), xxxi, 358 p.. - The Hague : Kluwer Law International, 2005.
ABSTRACT: Contents:. I. The emergence and foundation of contemporary international criminal proceedings. II. The influence of international human rights law on international criminal proceedings. III. Towards a system of general principles and methodology of international criminal proceedings. IV. Fundamentals on the transposition of national criminal (procedural) laws onto international criminal proceedings. V. Fundamentals of international criminal investigations and prosecution. VI. International criminal pre-trial proceedings. VII. Evidentiary rules and principles within international criminal proceedings. VIII. International criminal trial proceedings. IX. International criminal sentencing and enforcement proceedings. X. International criminal appeal proceedings. XI. International criminal review proceedings. XII. State cooperation within the law of international criminal proceedings. XIII. Special characteristics and methodology of contemporary international criminal proceedings. XIV. The future of international criminal proceedings and standardization of its practice.
International criminal justice : a critical analysis of institutions and procedures / Bohlander, Michael (ed.), 505 p.. - London : Cameron May Ltd., 2007.
ABSTRACT: Table of contents:. Equality of arms - guiding light or empty shell? Gathering evidence in international criminal trials - the view of the defence lawyer. The completion strategy of the ICTY and the ICTR. The institutional law of international tribunals: Salient comparative and hierarchical aspects. The international criminal judiciary - problems of judicial selection, independence and ethics. The role of a defence office - some lessons from recent and not so recent war crimes precedents. The structure of international criminal procedure: 'Adversarial', 'inquisitorial' or mixed?
Human rights and criminal justice / Emmerson, Ben (ed.) ; Ashworth, Andrew ; Macdonald, Alison. - 2nd ed.., cxxxii, 905 p.. - London : Sweet & Maxwell, 2007.
ABSTRACT: Contents:. The European Convention on Human Rights. Principles of Interpretation. The Human Rights Act 1998. The definition of a criminal charge. Rights relating to arrest and detention in policy custody. Entry, search and seizure. Convert investigation. The substantive criminal law. The burden and standard or proof. Retrospectivity and the principle of legal certainty. Issues of criminal responsibility. Double jeopardy. Bail. Aspects of criminal procedure. Criminal evidence. Sentencing and related issues. Appeals. The rights of victims of crime.
The Tokyo war crimes trial : the pursuit of justice in the wake of world war II / Totani, Yuma - (Harvard East Asian monographs ; 299), xiv, 335 p.. - Cambridge : Harvard University Asia Center, 2008.
ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Lessons from Nuremberg. 2. The Trial of Emperor Hirohito?. 3. Tojo and Other Suspects. 4. Narrative of the War. 5. Leadership Responsibility for War Crimes. 6. Nanking and the Death Railway. 7. Documenting Japanese Atrocities. 8. The First Trial Analysts. 9. Pal’s Dissent and its Repercussions.
Evidence before the International Court of Justice / Riddell, Anna ; Plant, Brendan, xxviii, 420 p.. - London : British Institute of International and Comparative Law, 2009.
ABSTRACT: 1. INTRODUCTION. 2. Structure and organization of the Court : implications for the Court's approach to evidence. 3. Production of evidence : rights and responsibilities of the parties, powers of the Court. 4. Proof. 5. Admissibility and use of evidence. 6. Non-production, privilege, and non-appearance. 7. Documentary evidence. 8. Testimonial evidence. 9. Expert evidence. 10. Evidence in proceedings under the Court's advisory jurisdiction. 11. CONCLUSION.
International criminal procedure : a clash of legal cultures / Schuonm Christine, xviii, 365 p.. - Hague : T.M.C. Asser Press, 2010.
ABSTRACT: Part I : INTRODUCTION. Part II : NATIONAL PROCEDURAL LAW. Part III : PROCEDURAL LAW OF THE ICTY. Part IV : PROCEDURAL LAW OF THE ICC. Part V : CONCLUDING REMARKS. Part VI : APPENDICES.
The internationalisation of criminal evidence : beyond the common law and civil law traditions / Jackson, John D. ; Summers, Sarah J. - (Law in context) , xxxiv, 404 p.. - Cambridge : Cambridge U. P., 2012.
ABSTRACT: Table of Contents:. 1. Evidence across traditions. 2. The common law tradition. 3. The civil law tradition. 4. Criminal evidence law and the international human rights context. 5. Evidence in the international criminal tribunals. 6. Fair trials and the use of improperly obtained evidence. 7. The presumption of innocence. 8. Silence and the privilege against self-incrimination. 9. Defence participation. 10. Confrontation and cross-examination. 11. Conclusion: towards a theory of evidentiary defence rights.
International criminal procedure : principles and rules / Sluiter, Göran ... [et al.], xxxvii, 1681 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U.P., 2013.
ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Håkan Friman, Suzanna Linton, Göran Sluiter, Sergey Vasiliev, Salvatore Zappalà: Introduction. I: GENERAL FRAMEWORK OF INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL PROCEDURE, by Lorenzo Gradoni, Dustin Lewis, Frederic Mégret, Sarah M.H. Nouwen, Jens David Ohlin, Astrid Reisinger-Coracini, Salvatore Zappalà. 2: Margaret deGuzman and Willian Schabas: Initiation of Investigation and Selection of Cases. 3: Karel de Meester, Kelly Pitcher, Rod Rastan, Göran Sluiter: Investigation, Coercive Measures, Arrest and Surrender. 4: Helen Brady, Matteo Costi, Håkan Friman, Fabricio Guariglia, Carl-Friedrich Stuckenberg: Charges. 5: Guido Acquaviva, Nancy Combs, Mikaela Heikkilä, Suzannah Linton, Yvonne McDermott, Sergey Vasiliev: Trial Process. 6: Gideon Boas, John Jackson, Barbara Roche, B. Don Taylor III: Appeals, Reviews, and Reconsideration. 7: Fergal Gaynor, Dow Jacobs, Mark Klamberg, and Vladimir Tochilovsky: The Law of Evidence. 8: Nina Jørgensen and Alexander Zahar: Deliberation, Dissent, Judgment. 9: Till Gut, Stefan Kirsch, Daryl Mundis, Melinda Taylor: Defence Issues. 10: Anne-Marie de Brouwer and Mikaela Heikkilä: Victim Issues: Participation, Protection, Reparation, and Assistance. 11: J. Iontcheva-Turner and Thomas Weigend: Negotiated Justice.
Fact-finding without facts : the uncertain evidentiary foundations of international criminal convictions / Combs, Nancy Amoury, xi,420 p.. - Cambridge : Cambridge U. P., 2013.
ABSTRACT: Table of Contents:. 1. The evidence supporting international criminal convictions. 2. Questions unanswered: international witnesses and the information unconveyed. 3. The educational, linguistic, and cultural impediments to accurate fact-finding at the international tribunals. 4. Of inconsistencies and their explanations. 5. Perjury: the counter-narrative. 6. Expectations unfulfilled: the consequences of the fact-finding impediments. 7. Casual indifference: the trial chambers' treatment of testimonial deficiencies. 8. Organizational liability revived: the pro-conviction bias explained. 9. Help needed: practical suggestions and procedural reforms to improve fact-finding accuracy. 10. Assessing the status quo: they are not doing what they say they are doing but is what they are doing worth doing?. 11. Conclusion.
The Sierra Leone Special Court and its legacy : the impact for Africa and international criminal law / Jalloh, Charles Chernor (ed.), xxxvii, 784 p.. - Cambridge : Cambridge U. P., 2014.
ABSTRACT: Table of Contents:. PART I. The Expectations of the Sierra Leone Tribunal. PART II. Approach to Individual Criminal Responsibility. PART III. Approach to Substantive International Crimes. PART IV. Approach to Challenging Issues in International Criminal Law. PART V. Funding, Process and Cooperation. PART VI. Institutional Innovations in the Practice of the Special Court for Sierra Leone. PART VII. Special Challenges Facing the Sierra Leone Tribunal. PART VIII. The Impact and Legacy of the Sierra Leone Tribunal.
Pluralism in international criminal law / van Sliedregt, Elies (ed.) ; Vasiliev, Sergey (ed.), xxxix, 435 p.. - Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2014.
ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Elies van Sliedregt and Sergey Vasiliev: Pluralism: A new framework for international criminal justice. 2. Cassandra Steer: Legal transplants or legal patchworking? The creation of international criminal law as a pluralistic body of law. 3. Mark A. Drumbl: The curious criminality of mass atrocity: Diverse actors, multiple truths, and plural responses. 4. Jens David Ohlin: Organizational criminality. 5. Marjolein Cupido: Pluralism in theories of liability: Joint criminal enterprise versus joint prepetration. 6. John D. Jackson and Yassin M. Brunger: Fragmentation and harmonization in the development of evidentiary practices in international criminal tribunals. 7. Barbora Holá: Consistency and pluralism of international sentencing: An empiricial assessment of the ICTY and ICTR practice. 8. Ruth A. Kok: National adjudication of international crimes: A Dutch approach. 9. Alexander Zahar: Pluralism and the rights of the accused in international criminal proceedings. 10. Elinor Fry: The nature of international crimes and evidentiary challenges: Preserving quality while managing quantity. 11. Wayne Jordash QC and Matthew R. Crowe: Evidentiary challenges for the defence: Domestic and international prosecutions of international crimes. 12. Gerhard Werle and Boris Burghardt: Establishing degrees of responsibility: Modes of participation in Article 25 of the ICC Statute. 13. James G. Stewart: Ten reasons for adopting a universal concept of participation in atrocity. 14. Javid Gadirov: Collective intentions and individual criminal responsibility in international criminal law. 15. H.H. Judge Peter Murphy and Lina Baddour: Evidence and selection of judges in international criminal tribunals: The need for a harmonized approach.
Prosecuting conflict-related sexual violence at the ICTY / Brammertz, Serge (ed.) ; Jarvis, Michelle (ed.), xl, 494 p. - Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2016.
ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Overview: the challenge of accountability for conflict-related sexual violence crimes (Michelle Jarvis). 2. International concern regarding conflict-related sexual violence in the lead-up to the ICTY's establishment (Grace Harbour). 3. Challenges to successful outcomes in sexual violence cases (Michelle Jarvis and Kate Vigneswaran). 4. Policies and institutional strategies for successful sexual violence prosecution (Michelle Jarvis and Najwa Nabti). 5. Proving crimes of sexual violence (Priya Gopalan, Daniela Kravetz and Aditya Menon). 6. Contextualizing sexual violence: selection of crimes (Laurel Baig, Michelle Jarvis, Elena Martin Salgado and Giulia Pinzauti). 7. Contextualizing sexual violence and linking it to senior officials: models of liability (Barbara Goy, Michelle Jarvis and Giulia Pinzauti). 8. Sentencing for sexual violence crimes (Laurel Baig). 9. The picture of sexual violence in the Former Yugoslavia conflicts as reflected in ICTY judgments (Saeeda Verrall). 10. Using the OTP's experience with sexual violence prosecutions as a springboard for building national capacity (Serge Brammertz, Michelle Jarvis and Lada Soljan). 11. Conclusions: situating the OTP's experience in a broader global context (Serge Brammertz and Michelle Jarvis). Annex A: The picture of sexual violence in the former Yugoslavia conflict as reflected in ICTY cases (Najwa Nahti and Saeeda Verrall). Annex B: Charges and outcomes in ICTY cases involving sexual violence (kate Vigneswaran).
The Inter-American Court of Human Rights : theory and practice, present and future / Haeck, Yves (ed.) ; Ruiz-Chiriboga, Oswaldo (ed.) ; Burbano-Herrera, Clara (ed.), xxxii, 832 p. - Cambridge : Intersentia, 2015.
ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Marijke De Pauw: The Inter-American Court of Human Rights and the interpretive method of external referencing: regional consensus v. universality. 2. Álvaro Paúl: An overview of the Inter-American Court's evaluation of evidence. 3. Geneviève Säuberli: Revision procedures: revisiting the case of Mapiripán Massacre v. Colombia. 4. Diana Contreras-Garduño, Kristin Xueqin Wu and Leo Zwaak: Who pays the bill? Possibilities and limitations of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights Legal Assistance Fund. 5. Francisco J. Rivera Juaristi: The amicus curiae in the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (1982-2013). 6. Oswaldo R. Ruiz-Chiriboga: Defining the scope of the provisions against the use of illegitimate coerced statements in the inter-American system. 7. Kresimir Kamber: Medical negligence and international human rights adjudication: procedural obligations in medical negligence cases under the American Convention on Human Righs and the European Convention on Human Rights. 8. Juana Maria Ibáñez Rivas: Use of force: requirements, limitations and pending challenges from the perspective of the jurisprudence of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights. 9. Aziz Tuffi Saliba and Tainá Garcia Maja: Judicial protection of states of emergency: an analysis of the amplitude of judicial protection of fundamental rights during the application of derogations. 10. Scott McKenzie: Yakye Axa v. Paraguay: upholding and framing the human right to water. 11. Thomas Antkowiak: Social, economic, and cultural rights: the Inter-American Court at a crossroads. 12. Manuel E. Ventura Robles: Impact of the reparations ordered by the Inter-American Court of Human Rights and contributions to the justiciable nature of economic, social and cultural rights. 13. Gina Donoso: Sacred fire as healing: psychosocial rehabilitation and indigenous peoples in the Inter-American Court's judgments. 14. Agostina N. Cichero and Sebastián A. Green Martínez: Punitive damages and the principle of full reparation in the case law of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights. 15. Clara Burbano Herrera: The Inter-American Court of Human Rights and its role in preventing violations of human rights through provisional measures. 16. Gabriella Citroni: The contribution of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights and other international human rights bodies to the struggle against enforced disappearances. 17. Jeffrey Davis and Micaela Perez Ferrero: Building truth and moving justice: the Inter-American Court and the forcible disappearance of children. 18. Frédéric Mégret and Jean-Paul S. Calderón: The move towards a victim-centred concept of criminal law and the "criminalization" of the inter-American human rights law: a case of human rights law devouring itself?. 19. Patricio Galella: Amnesty laws in the case law of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights. 20. Nikolas Kyriakou: Rights cast into oblivion? Amnesties in the case law of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights. 21. Monica Yriart: Jurisprudence in a political vortex: the right of indigenous peoples to give or withhold consent to investment and development projects - the implementation of Saramaka v. Suriname. 22. Valeska David and Julie Fraser: Juvenile criminal justice before the Inter-American Court of Human Rights: aims and limitations of the imprisonment of children. 23. Geneviève Säuberli: The case of the Kichwa Peoples of the Sarayaku v. Ecuador: constructing a right to consultation and to cultural identity?. 24. Salvatore Fabio Nicolosi: The treatment of irregular migrants in the inter-American human rights and European Union case law: two parallel lines may even meet. 25. Elena Falletti: Sexual orientation and parenthood: a comparative analysis of the case law of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights and the European Court of Human Rights. 26. Clara O'Connell: What a "private life" means for women. 27. Laurence Burgorgue-Larsen: Chronicle of a fashionable theory in Latin America: decoding the doctrinal discourse on conventionality control. 28. Eric Tardif: The Radilla-Pacheco v. Mexico case: a paradigmatical shift towards conventionality control in Mexico. 29. Paola Andrea Acosta Alvarado: The Latin American judicial dialogue: a two-way street towards effective protection. 30. Rosmerlin Estupiñan-Silva: The Inter-American Court and the International Criminal Court: transjudicial communication, boundaries and opportunities. 31. Cristiana Domínguez: Inter-American Court of Human Rights and European Court of Human Rights: from observation to interaction on human rights. 32. Martin Nicolás Montoya Céspedes: The Inter-American Court of Human Rights' positive obligations doctrine: between unidirectional influence and judicial dialogue. 33. Claudia Martin and Diego Rodrígues-Pinzón: Strengthening or straining the inter-American system on human rights.

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