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Crimes Against Humanity

Yearbook of the International Law Commission 2015, Vol. II, Part 2, 2019
Abstract Race and racism have a schizophrenic life in international criminal law (ICL) histories, both ever-present, and ever-elusive. This chapter excavates this double-life by tracing, not race, but its repression, in ICL historians’ projection of ICL’s origins to the mid-nineteenth century regime instituted to implement the ...
Matthew Lippman
semanticscholar   +4 more sources

Crimes Against Humanity

2018
This chapter identifies three unfortunate gaps in the United States’ federal penal code: The United States lacks a crimes against humanity statute, the war crimes statute has a limited jurisdictional reach and does not conform to US obligations under the Geneva Conventions, and the code lacks express mention of superior responsibility.
Kerstin von Lingen   +7 more
semanticscholar   +6 more sources

Crimes Against Humanity

The Routledge History of the Second World War, 2021
M. Edele
semanticscholar   +4 more sources

“Crimes Against Humanity”

SSRN Electronic Journal, 2017
Using existing case-law and literature, this digest provides an in-depth analysis of each one of the legal requirements of crimes against humanity: attack, policy, object of the attack, character of the attack and nexus.
Marina Lostal, Emilie Hunter
semanticscholar   +3 more sources

Disability, Human Rights Violations, and Crimes Against Humanity

American Journal of International Law, 2021
Persons with disabilities have historically been subjected to egregious human rights violations. Yet despite well-documented and widespread harms, one billion persons with disabilities remain largely neglected by the international laws, legal processes ...
William I. Pons, J. Lord, M. Stein
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Due Diligence and the Obligation to Prevent Genocide and Crimes Against Humanity

Due Diligence in the International Legal Order, 2020
This chapter analyses the due diligence component of the duty to prevent genocide and crimes against humanity. It examines the International Court of Justice (ICJ) judgment in the Bosnia Genocide case of 2007 and outlines the system of differentiated ...
L. Herik   +4 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Perceptions of justice and victims of crimes against humanity in Guinea

International Review of Victimology, 2020
Crimes against humanity in Guinea have caused many thousands of deaths, the exile of countless individuals, and the rape of hundreds of women. Since its independence in 1958, Guinea has been ruled by various authoritarian regimes and experienced periods ...
Rouguiatou Balde, Jo-Anne M. Wemmers
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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