The International Criminal Responsibility of War's Funders and Profiteers
Herausgeber: Jørgensen, Nina H B
The International Criminal Responsibility of War's Funders and Profiteers
Herausgeber: Jørgensen, Nina H B
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Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 500
- Erscheinungstermin: 17. September 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 32mm
- Gewicht: 930g
- ISBN-13: 9781108483612
- ISBN-10: 1108483615
- Artikelnr.: 59507723
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
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Introduction Nina H. B. Jørgensen; Part I. Financiers and Profiteers after
the Second World War: Legal and Political Perspectives: 1. Economic
Aggression - A Soviet Concept Kirsten Sellars; 2. Forced Labour and
Norwegian War Profiteers in the Legal Purges after the Second World War
Hans Otto Frøland; 3. Economic Protectionism: Economic Policy and the
Choice of Targets in International Criminal Tribunals Mark D. Kielsgard;
Part II. Arms Fairs and 'Flying Money': The Circulation of Weapons, Art and
Cash in Conflict Zones: 4. Linking Economic Actors to the Core
International Crimes of the Syrian Regime Nina H. B. Jørgensen and William
H. Wile; 5. The Islamic State and the Illicit Traffic of Cultural Property
Marina Lostal; 6. Arms Transfer Complicity under the Rome Statute Tomas
Hamilton; Part III. Developing the Available Law: Economic War Crimes and
Crimes against Humanity: 7. The Prohibition of Pillage in International
Humanitarian Law Eve La Haye; 8. A Jurisprudential History of the
Displacement Crimes Applicable to Corporate Landgrabbing James G. Stewart;
9. The International Responsibility of War Profiteers for Trafficking in
Persons Michael Ramsden; Part IV. Where should the buck stop? The Legal
Framework for Economic Aiders and Abettors: 10. Charles Taylor Inc: Lessons
from the Trial of a President, Businessman and Warlord Nina H. B.
Jørgensen; 11. A Different Type of Aid: The Funders of Wars as Aiders and
Abettors under International Criminal Law Jan Wouters and Hendrik
Vandekerckhove; 12. Aiding and Abetting and Causation in the Commission of
International Crimes - the Cases of Dutch Businessmen Van Anraat and
Kouwenhoven Göran Sluiter; Part V. Criminal Accountability and Beyond:
Future Directions for Individual and Corporate Responsibility: 13. On
Criminal Responsibility for Terrorist Financing: An Analysis of the
International Convention for the Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism
Liu Daqun; 14. Seeking Accountability of Corporate Actors Juan P.
Calderon-Meza; 15. Alternatives to Prosecutions: Accountability through
Civil Litigation for Human Rights Violations by Private Military
Contractors Katherine Gallagher; Part VI. Discovering and Recovering the
Profits of War: Fines, Forfeiture and Reparations: 16. Catching Wars'
Funders and Profiteers: The Disjointed Web of Corporate Criminal Liability
in England and Wales Russell Hopkins; 17. Asset Recovery at International
(ised) Criminal Tribunals: Fines, Forfeiture, and Orders for Reparations
Daley J. Birkett; 18. Reparation Mechanisms for Victims of Armed Conflict:
Common and Basic Principles Shuichi Furuya; Conclusion: The Relationship
Between Economic and Atrocity Crimes - Challenges and Opportunities Stephen
J. Rapp.
the Second World War: Legal and Political Perspectives: 1. Economic
Aggression - A Soviet Concept Kirsten Sellars; 2. Forced Labour and
Norwegian War Profiteers in the Legal Purges after the Second World War
Hans Otto Frøland; 3. Economic Protectionism: Economic Policy and the
Choice of Targets in International Criminal Tribunals Mark D. Kielsgard;
Part II. Arms Fairs and 'Flying Money': The Circulation of Weapons, Art and
Cash in Conflict Zones: 4. Linking Economic Actors to the Core
International Crimes of the Syrian Regime Nina H. B. Jørgensen and William
H. Wile; 5. The Islamic State and the Illicit Traffic of Cultural Property
Marina Lostal; 6. Arms Transfer Complicity under the Rome Statute Tomas
Hamilton; Part III. Developing the Available Law: Economic War Crimes and
Crimes against Humanity: 7. The Prohibition of Pillage in International
Humanitarian Law Eve La Haye; 8. A Jurisprudential History of the
Displacement Crimes Applicable to Corporate Landgrabbing James G. Stewart;
9. The International Responsibility of War Profiteers for Trafficking in
Persons Michael Ramsden; Part IV. Where should the buck stop? The Legal
Framework for Economic Aiders and Abettors: 10. Charles Taylor Inc: Lessons
from the Trial of a President, Businessman and Warlord Nina H. B.
Jørgensen; 11. A Different Type of Aid: The Funders of Wars as Aiders and
Abettors under International Criminal Law Jan Wouters and Hendrik
Vandekerckhove; 12. Aiding and Abetting and Causation in the Commission of
International Crimes - the Cases of Dutch Businessmen Van Anraat and
Kouwenhoven Göran Sluiter; Part V. Criminal Accountability and Beyond:
Future Directions for Individual and Corporate Responsibility: 13. On
Criminal Responsibility for Terrorist Financing: An Analysis of the
International Convention for the Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism
Liu Daqun; 14. Seeking Accountability of Corporate Actors Juan P.
Calderon-Meza; 15. Alternatives to Prosecutions: Accountability through
Civil Litigation for Human Rights Violations by Private Military
Contractors Katherine Gallagher; Part VI. Discovering and Recovering the
Profits of War: Fines, Forfeiture and Reparations: 16. Catching Wars'
Funders and Profiteers: The Disjointed Web of Corporate Criminal Liability
in England and Wales Russell Hopkins; 17. Asset Recovery at International
(ised) Criminal Tribunals: Fines, Forfeiture, and Orders for Reparations
Daley J. Birkett; 18. Reparation Mechanisms for Victims of Armed Conflict:
Common and Basic Principles Shuichi Furuya; Conclusion: The Relationship
Between Economic and Atrocity Crimes - Challenges and Opportunities Stephen
J. Rapp.
Introduction Nina H. B. Jørgensen; Part I. Financiers and Profiteers after
the Second World War: Legal and Political Perspectives: 1. Economic
Aggression - A Soviet Concept Kirsten Sellars; 2. Forced Labour and
Norwegian War Profiteers in the Legal Purges after the Second World War
Hans Otto Frøland; 3. Economic Protectionism: Economic Policy and the
Choice of Targets in International Criminal Tribunals Mark D. Kielsgard;
Part II. Arms Fairs and 'Flying Money': The Circulation of Weapons, Art and
Cash in Conflict Zones: 4. Linking Economic Actors to the Core
International Crimes of the Syrian Regime Nina H. B. Jørgensen and William
H. Wile; 5. The Islamic State and the Illicit Traffic of Cultural Property
Marina Lostal; 6. Arms Transfer Complicity under the Rome Statute Tomas
Hamilton; Part III. Developing the Available Law: Economic War Crimes and
Crimes against Humanity: 7. The Prohibition of Pillage in International
Humanitarian Law Eve La Haye; 8. A Jurisprudential History of the
Displacement Crimes Applicable to Corporate Landgrabbing James G. Stewart;
9. The International Responsibility of War Profiteers for Trafficking in
Persons Michael Ramsden; Part IV. Where should the buck stop? The Legal
Framework for Economic Aiders and Abettors: 10. Charles Taylor Inc: Lessons
from the Trial of a President, Businessman and Warlord Nina H. B.
Jørgensen; 11. A Different Type of Aid: The Funders of Wars as Aiders and
Abettors under International Criminal Law Jan Wouters and Hendrik
Vandekerckhove; 12. Aiding and Abetting and Causation in the Commission of
International Crimes - the Cases of Dutch Businessmen Van Anraat and
Kouwenhoven Göran Sluiter; Part V. Criminal Accountability and Beyond:
Future Directions for Individual and Corporate Responsibility: 13. On
Criminal Responsibility for Terrorist Financing: An Analysis of the
International Convention for the Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism
Liu Daqun; 14. Seeking Accountability of Corporate Actors Juan P.
Calderon-Meza; 15. Alternatives to Prosecutions: Accountability through
Civil Litigation for Human Rights Violations by Private Military
Contractors Katherine Gallagher; Part VI. Discovering and Recovering the
Profits of War: Fines, Forfeiture and Reparations: 16. Catching Wars'
Funders and Profiteers: The Disjointed Web of Corporate Criminal Liability
in England and Wales Russell Hopkins; 17. Asset Recovery at International
(ised) Criminal Tribunals: Fines, Forfeiture, and Orders for Reparations
Daley J. Birkett; 18. Reparation Mechanisms for Victims of Armed Conflict:
Common and Basic Principles Shuichi Furuya; Conclusion: The Relationship
Between Economic and Atrocity Crimes - Challenges and Opportunities Stephen
J. Rapp.
the Second World War: Legal and Political Perspectives: 1. Economic
Aggression - A Soviet Concept Kirsten Sellars; 2. Forced Labour and
Norwegian War Profiteers in the Legal Purges after the Second World War
Hans Otto Frøland; 3. Economic Protectionism: Economic Policy and the
Choice of Targets in International Criminal Tribunals Mark D. Kielsgard;
Part II. Arms Fairs and 'Flying Money': The Circulation of Weapons, Art and
Cash in Conflict Zones: 4. Linking Economic Actors to the Core
International Crimes of the Syrian Regime Nina H. B. Jørgensen and William
H. Wile; 5. The Islamic State and the Illicit Traffic of Cultural Property
Marina Lostal; 6. Arms Transfer Complicity under the Rome Statute Tomas
Hamilton; Part III. Developing the Available Law: Economic War Crimes and
Crimes against Humanity: 7. The Prohibition of Pillage in International
Humanitarian Law Eve La Haye; 8. A Jurisprudential History of the
Displacement Crimes Applicable to Corporate Landgrabbing James G. Stewart;
9. The International Responsibility of War Profiteers for Trafficking in
Persons Michael Ramsden; Part IV. Where should the buck stop? The Legal
Framework for Economic Aiders and Abettors: 10. Charles Taylor Inc: Lessons
from the Trial of a President, Businessman and Warlord Nina H. B.
Jørgensen; 11. A Different Type of Aid: The Funders of Wars as Aiders and
Abettors under International Criminal Law Jan Wouters and Hendrik
Vandekerckhove; 12. Aiding and Abetting and Causation in the Commission of
International Crimes - the Cases of Dutch Businessmen Van Anraat and
Kouwenhoven Göran Sluiter; Part V. Criminal Accountability and Beyond:
Future Directions for Individual and Corporate Responsibility: 13. On
Criminal Responsibility for Terrorist Financing: An Analysis of the
International Convention for the Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism
Liu Daqun; 14. Seeking Accountability of Corporate Actors Juan P.
Calderon-Meza; 15. Alternatives to Prosecutions: Accountability through
Civil Litigation for Human Rights Violations by Private Military
Contractors Katherine Gallagher; Part VI. Discovering and Recovering the
Profits of War: Fines, Forfeiture and Reparations: 16. Catching Wars'
Funders and Profiteers: The Disjointed Web of Corporate Criminal Liability
in England and Wales Russell Hopkins; 17. Asset Recovery at International
(ised) Criminal Tribunals: Fines, Forfeiture, and Orders for Reparations
Daley J. Birkett; 18. Reparation Mechanisms for Victims of Armed Conflict:
Common and Basic Principles Shuichi Furuya; Conclusion: The Relationship
Between Economic and Atrocity Crimes - Challenges and Opportunities Stephen
J. Rapp.