Judicial dialogue on human rights : the practice of international criminal tribunals

著者

    • Lobba, Paolo
    • Mariniello, Triestino

書誌事項

Judicial dialogue on human rights : the practice of international criminal tribunals

edited by Paolo Lobba, Triestino Mariniello

(International studies in human rights, v. 120)

Brill Nijhoff, c2017

  • : hardback

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注記

Includes index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Judicial Dialogue on Human Rights offers a critical legal perspective on the manner in which international criminal tribunals select, (re-)interpret and apply the principles and standards formulated by the European Court of Human Rights. A part of the book is devoted to testing the assumption that the current practice of cross-referencing, though widespread, is incoherent in method and erratic in substance. Notable illustrations analysed in the book include the nullum crimen principle, prohibition of torture, hearsay evidence and victims' rights. Another section of the book seeks to devise a methodologically sound 'grammar' of judicial dialogue, focussing on how and when human rights concepts may be transferred into the context of international criminal justice.

目次

Foreword Paulo Pinto de Albuquerque List of Abbreviations Contributors The Grammar of the Judicial Dialogue between International Criminal Tribunals and the European Court: Introductory Remarks Paolo Lobba and Triestino Mariniello Dynamics of Judicial Dialogue: Methods and Rationales 1 Cross-Fertilisation under the Look of Glass: Transjudicial Grammar and Reception of Strasbourg Jurisprudence by International Criminal Tribunals Sergey Vasiliev 2 'Directory Authority': Fertilising International Criminal Tribunals' Human Rights Standards with European Court of Human Rights' Case Law Julia Geneuss 3 Judicial Dialogue in Light of Comparative Criminal Law and Justice Christoph Burchard The Use of the ECtHR Jurisprudence by ICTs: A Bird's-Eye View 4 Article 21 (3) of the ICC Statute: Identifying and Applying 'Internationally Recognized Human Rights' Volker Nerlich 5 Article 21(3) of the ICC Statute and 'Internationally Recognized Human Rights' as a Source of Mandatory Judicial Dialogue Christophe Deprez 6 Beyond Anecdotal Reference: A Quantitative Assessment of ICTY References to the Jurisprudence of the ECtHR Frauke Sauerwein Cross-Fertilization and Substantive Issues: Crimes and Punishment 7 The Nulla Poena Sine Lege: A Symptomatic Sign of Interactions between Strasbourg and The Hague Damien Scalia 8 Critical Remarks on the Accessibility/Foreseeability Standard as Applied in International Criminal Justice Giulio Vanacore 9 The Judicial Dialogue between the ECtHR and the ad hoc Tribunals on the Right to Rehabilitation of Offenders Alice Riccardi 10 Judicial Dialogue and the Definition of Torture: The Importation of ICTs from European Jurisprudence Elena Maculan 11 Confronting the Divergent Notions of Torture and Other-Ill Treatment under the Rome Statute through the Lens of Cumulative Conviction Elizabeth Santalla Vargas Fairness of International Criminal Proceedings: The (Side) Effects of Cross-Fertilization 12 Absent Witnesses and the Right to Confrontation: The Influence of the Jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights on International Criminal Law Yvonne McDermott 13 The Special Court for Sierra Leone's Misapplication of the European Court of Human Rights Case Law on Hearsay Evidence and Corroboration: The Taylor Appeal Judgment and the Al Khawaja and Tahery Case Yael Vias Gvirsman 14 The Interaction between the International Criminal Court and the European Court of Human Rights-The Right to the Truth for Victims of Serious Violations of Human Rights: The Importation of a New Right? Paolo Caroli 15 Self- or Cross-Fertilisation? Referencing ECtHR Jurisprudence to Justify Victim Participation at the ICC Kerstin Braun Index

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