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Management number | 201901332 | Release Date | 2025/10/08 | List Price | $15.31 | Model Number | 201901332 | ||
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This book explores the International Criminal Court's (ICC) principle of complementarity as a transnational site and adaptive strategy for realizing governance goals. It illustrates how complementarity came to be framed as a catalyst for compliance and its effects on the legal frameworks and institutions of three different ICC situation countries in Africa. It urges a critical rethinking of the ICC's politics and a reorientation towards international criminal justice as a project of global legal pluralism.
Format: Paperback / softback
Length: 387 pages
Publication date: 16 June 2022
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Since its establishment at the turn of the century, the International Criminal Court (ICC) has been a central preoccupation, striving to catalyze the pursuit of criminal accountability at the domestic level. Drawing on ten years of extensive research, this book theorizes the ICC's principle of complementarity as a transnational site and adaptive strategy for realizing an array of ambitious governance goals. Through a grounded, inter-disciplinary approach, it illustrates how complementarity came to be framed as a catalyst for compliance and its unexpected effects on the legal frameworks and institutions of three different ICC situation countries in Africa: Uganda, Kenya, and the Democratic Republic of Congo. Linking complementarity's law and practice to contemporary debates in international law and relations, the book unsettles international law's dominant progressive narrative. It urges a critical rethinking of the ICC's politics and a reorientation towards international criminal justice as a project of global legal pluralism.
Since its establishment at the turn of the century, the International Criminal Court (ICC) has been a central preoccupation, striving to catalyze the pursuit of criminal accountability at the domestic level. Drawing on ten years of extensive research, this book theorizes the ICC's principle of complementarity as a transnational site and adaptive strategy for realizing an array of ambitious governance goals. Through a grounded, inter-disciplinary approach, it illustrates how complementarity came to be framed as a catalyst for compliance and its unexpected effects on the legal frameworks and institutions of three different ICC situation countries in Africa: Uganda, Kenya, and the Democratic Republic of Congo. Linking complementarity's law and practice to contemporary debates in international law and relations, the book unsettles international law's dominant progressive narrative. It urges a critical rethinking of the ICC's politics and a reorientation towards international criminal justice as a project of global legal pluralism.
ISBN-13: 9781108459723
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