Leila Nadya Sadat
Seeking Accountability for the Unlawful Use of Force
Leila Nadya Sadat
Seeking Accountability for the Unlawful Use of Force
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Analysis of how to prevent war and reinforce UN systems by imposing accountability on individuals and states for the unlawful use of force.
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Analysis of how to prevent war and reinforce UN systems by imposing accountability on individuals and states for the unlawful use of force.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 654
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. März 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 38mm
- Gewicht: 1046g
- ISBN-13: 9781316638118
- ISBN-10: 1316638111
- Artikelnr.: 50445248
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 654
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. März 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 38mm
- Gewicht: 1046g
- ISBN-13: 9781316638118
- ISBN-10: 1316638111
- Artikelnr.: 50445248
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Leila Nadya Sadat is the James Carr Professor of International Criminal Law at Washington University Law and Director of the Harris World Law Institute. Since 2012 she has served as Special Adviser on Crimes Against Humanity to the ICC Prosecutor, and in 2008 launched the Crimes Against Humanity Initiative to address the scourge of global atrocity crimes and draft a treaty on their punishment and prevention. Sadat is an award-winning scholar who recently received an Honorary Doctorate from Northwestern University, Illinois, and the Arthur Holly Compton Faculty Achievement Award. She is incoming President of the International Law Association (American Branch) and a member of the US Council on Foreign Relations.
Biographies of contributors; Foreword Sir Geoffrey Robertson; Preface Leila
Nadya Sadat; Introduction Donald M. Ferencz; Part I. Historic and
Contemporary Perspectives on the Unlawful Use of Force: 1. The status of
aggression in international law from Versailles to Kampala - and what the
future might hold M. Cherif Bassiouni; 2. Nuremberg and aggressive war
William A. Schabas; 3. The Tokyo IMT and crimes against peace (aggression)
- is there anything to learn? Robert Cryer; 4. The just war in ancient
legal thought Larry May; 5. Definitions of aggression as harbingers of
international change Kirsten E. Sellars; 6. International humanitarian law
in an age of extremes: unlawful uses of force by non-state actors David M.
Crane; Part II. Mechanisms for Restraining the Unlawful Use of Force and
Enhancing Accountability: 7. Commissions of inquiry and the Jus ad Bellum
Larissa van den Herik and Catherine Harwood; 8. The international court of
justice and the use of force Douglas J. Pivnichny; 9. The other enemy:
transnational terrorists, armed attacks and armed conflict Carrie
McDougall; 10. Towards the substantive convergence of international human
rights law and the laws of armed conflict - the case of Hassan v. the
United Kingdom Robin Geiß; 11. International law on the use of force:
current challenges Sergey Sayapin; Part III. The Illegal Use of Force and
the Prosecution of International Crimes: 12. The crime of aggression under
customary international law Yoram Dinstein; 13. The crime of aggression and
the international criminal court Jennifer Trahan; 14. Prosecuting
aggression through other universal core crimes at the International
Criminal Court Terje Einarsen; 15. The illegal use of armed force (other
inhumane act) as a crime against humanity: an assessment of the case for a
new crime at the International Criminal Court Manuel J. Ventura; 16.
Aggression, atrocities, and accountability: building a case in Iraq John
Hagan and Anna Hanson; Part IV. Imagining a Better World: 17. Rethinking
the relationship between Jus in Bello and Jus ad Bellum: a dialogue between
authors Federica D'Alessandra and Robert Heinsch; 18. Twenty-first-century
paradigms on military force for humane purposes David J. Scheffer and
Angela Walker; 19. The presumption of peace: illegal war, human rights, and
humanitarian law Mary Ellen O'Connell; 20. The urgent imperative of peace
Leila Nadya Sadat; Epilogue Benjamin B. Ferencz; Index.
Nadya Sadat; Introduction Donald M. Ferencz; Part I. Historic and
Contemporary Perspectives on the Unlawful Use of Force: 1. The status of
aggression in international law from Versailles to Kampala - and what the
future might hold M. Cherif Bassiouni; 2. Nuremberg and aggressive war
William A. Schabas; 3. The Tokyo IMT and crimes against peace (aggression)
- is there anything to learn? Robert Cryer; 4. The just war in ancient
legal thought Larry May; 5. Definitions of aggression as harbingers of
international change Kirsten E. Sellars; 6. International humanitarian law
in an age of extremes: unlawful uses of force by non-state actors David M.
Crane; Part II. Mechanisms for Restraining the Unlawful Use of Force and
Enhancing Accountability: 7. Commissions of inquiry and the Jus ad Bellum
Larissa van den Herik and Catherine Harwood; 8. The international court of
justice and the use of force Douglas J. Pivnichny; 9. The other enemy:
transnational terrorists, armed attacks and armed conflict Carrie
McDougall; 10. Towards the substantive convergence of international human
rights law and the laws of armed conflict - the case of Hassan v. the
United Kingdom Robin Geiß; 11. International law on the use of force:
current challenges Sergey Sayapin; Part III. The Illegal Use of Force and
the Prosecution of International Crimes: 12. The crime of aggression under
customary international law Yoram Dinstein; 13. The crime of aggression and
the international criminal court Jennifer Trahan; 14. Prosecuting
aggression through other universal core crimes at the International
Criminal Court Terje Einarsen; 15. The illegal use of armed force (other
inhumane act) as a crime against humanity: an assessment of the case for a
new crime at the International Criminal Court Manuel J. Ventura; 16.
Aggression, atrocities, and accountability: building a case in Iraq John
Hagan and Anna Hanson; Part IV. Imagining a Better World: 17. Rethinking
the relationship between Jus in Bello and Jus ad Bellum: a dialogue between
authors Federica D'Alessandra and Robert Heinsch; 18. Twenty-first-century
paradigms on military force for humane purposes David J. Scheffer and
Angela Walker; 19. The presumption of peace: illegal war, human rights, and
humanitarian law Mary Ellen O'Connell; 20. The urgent imperative of peace
Leila Nadya Sadat; Epilogue Benjamin B. Ferencz; Index.
Biographies of contributors; Foreword Sir Geoffrey Robertson; Preface Leila
Nadya Sadat; Introduction Donald M. Ferencz; Part I. Historic and
Contemporary Perspectives on the Unlawful Use of Force: 1. The status of
aggression in international law from Versailles to Kampala - and what the
future might hold M. Cherif Bassiouni; 2. Nuremberg and aggressive war
William A. Schabas; 3. The Tokyo IMT and crimes against peace (aggression)
- is there anything to learn? Robert Cryer; 4. The just war in ancient
legal thought Larry May; 5. Definitions of aggression as harbingers of
international change Kirsten E. Sellars; 6. International humanitarian law
in an age of extremes: unlawful uses of force by non-state actors David M.
Crane; Part II. Mechanisms for Restraining the Unlawful Use of Force and
Enhancing Accountability: 7. Commissions of inquiry and the Jus ad Bellum
Larissa van den Herik and Catherine Harwood; 8. The international court of
justice and the use of force Douglas J. Pivnichny; 9. The other enemy:
transnational terrorists, armed attacks and armed conflict Carrie
McDougall; 10. Towards the substantive convergence of international human
rights law and the laws of armed conflict - the case of Hassan v. the
United Kingdom Robin Geiß; 11. International law on the use of force:
current challenges Sergey Sayapin; Part III. The Illegal Use of Force and
the Prosecution of International Crimes: 12. The crime of aggression under
customary international law Yoram Dinstein; 13. The crime of aggression and
the international criminal court Jennifer Trahan; 14. Prosecuting
aggression through other universal core crimes at the International
Criminal Court Terje Einarsen; 15. The illegal use of armed force (other
inhumane act) as a crime against humanity: an assessment of the case for a
new crime at the International Criminal Court Manuel J. Ventura; 16.
Aggression, atrocities, and accountability: building a case in Iraq John
Hagan and Anna Hanson; Part IV. Imagining a Better World: 17. Rethinking
the relationship between Jus in Bello and Jus ad Bellum: a dialogue between
authors Federica D'Alessandra and Robert Heinsch; 18. Twenty-first-century
paradigms on military force for humane purposes David J. Scheffer and
Angela Walker; 19. The presumption of peace: illegal war, human rights, and
humanitarian law Mary Ellen O'Connell; 20. The urgent imperative of peace
Leila Nadya Sadat; Epilogue Benjamin B. Ferencz; Index.
Nadya Sadat; Introduction Donald M. Ferencz; Part I. Historic and
Contemporary Perspectives on the Unlawful Use of Force: 1. The status of
aggression in international law from Versailles to Kampala - and what the
future might hold M. Cherif Bassiouni; 2. Nuremberg and aggressive war
William A. Schabas; 3. The Tokyo IMT and crimes against peace (aggression)
- is there anything to learn? Robert Cryer; 4. The just war in ancient
legal thought Larry May; 5. Definitions of aggression as harbingers of
international change Kirsten E. Sellars; 6. International humanitarian law
in an age of extremes: unlawful uses of force by non-state actors David M.
Crane; Part II. Mechanisms for Restraining the Unlawful Use of Force and
Enhancing Accountability: 7. Commissions of inquiry and the Jus ad Bellum
Larissa van den Herik and Catherine Harwood; 8. The international court of
justice and the use of force Douglas J. Pivnichny; 9. The other enemy:
transnational terrorists, armed attacks and armed conflict Carrie
McDougall; 10. Towards the substantive convergence of international human
rights law and the laws of armed conflict - the case of Hassan v. the
United Kingdom Robin Geiß; 11. International law on the use of force:
current challenges Sergey Sayapin; Part III. The Illegal Use of Force and
the Prosecution of International Crimes: 12. The crime of aggression under
customary international law Yoram Dinstein; 13. The crime of aggression and
the international criminal court Jennifer Trahan; 14. Prosecuting
aggression through other universal core crimes at the International
Criminal Court Terje Einarsen; 15. The illegal use of armed force (other
inhumane act) as a crime against humanity: an assessment of the case for a
new crime at the International Criminal Court Manuel J. Ventura; 16.
Aggression, atrocities, and accountability: building a case in Iraq John
Hagan and Anna Hanson; Part IV. Imagining a Better World: 17. Rethinking
the relationship between Jus in Bello and Jus ad Bellum: a dialogue between
authors Federica D'Alessandra and Robert Heinsch; 18. Twenty-first-century
paradigms on military force for humane purposes David J. Scheffer and
Angela Walker; 19. The presumption of peace: illegal war, human rights, and
humanitarian law Mary Ellen O'Connell; 20. The urgent imperative of peace
Leila Nadya Sadat; Epilogue Benjamin B. Ferencz; Index.