The Tokyo War Crimes Tribunal : law, history, and jurisprudence
著者
書誌事項
The Tokyo War Crimes Tribunal : law, history, and jurisprudence
Cambridge University Press, 2020 c2018
- : pbk
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注記
Originally published: 2018
Includes bibliographical references (p. 523-533) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Like its Nuremberg counterpart, the Tokyo Trial was foundational in the field of international law. However, until now, the persistent notion of 'victor's justice' in the existing historical literature has made it difficult to treat it as such. David Cohen and Yuma Totani seek to redress this by cutting through persistent orthodoxies and ideologies that have plagued the trial. Instead they present it simply as a judicial process, and in so doing reveal its enduring importance for international jurisprudence. A wide range of primary sources are considered, including court transcripts, court exhibits, the majority judgment, and five separate concurring and dissenting opinions. The authors also provide comparative analysis of the Allied trials at Nuremberg, resulting in a comprehensive and empirically grounded study of the trial. The Tokyo Tribunal was a watershed moment in the history of the Asia-Pacific region. This groundbreaking study reveals it is of continuing relevance today.
目次
- Introduction
- Part I. The Allied War Crimes Policy, the Indictment, and Court Proceedings: 1. The framework of the trial
- 2. Charges of crimes against peace
- 3. The Japanese system of government
- 4. Individual roles in the making of the war and the overall conspiracy
- 5. Counts on murder, conventional war crimes, and crimes against humanity
- 6. Accountability of war crimes
- Part II. Law and Jurisprudence of the Judgments and Separate Opinions: 7. The majority judgment: crimes against peace
- 8. An alternative perspective on accountability for crimes against peace: the two Webb judgments
- 9. The majority judgment on war crimes
- 10. An alternative Tokyo judgment: the draft Webb judgment on war crimes
- 11. The dissenting opinions by Justices Bernard and Roeling
- 12. Pal's 'judgment', or dissenting opinion, on crimes against peace
- 13. Pal's treatment of war crimes charges
- 14. The concurring opinions of Justices Webb and Jaranilla
- Conclusion.
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