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International Criminal Law: Using or Abusing Legality? (eBook)


ISBN13: 9781409438687
Published: April 2014
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: eBook (PDF)
Price: Out of print
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This book analyses the relationship between law and violence, the utility of law over violence and whether legality as an approach has an inherent disability in addressing mass violence as a crime. The study is located within international law and assesses whether prosecuting political violence would necessarily entail an abuse of the legal process. The intention is to encourage definition of criminal aggression via legal processes laid down by the International Criminal Court, rather than giving favour to political action under the United Nations Charter.

Issues discussed in the book include the controversies over the location of the crime of aggression in either law or politics, taking a legal approach to the problems outlined. Using examples from Libya, the Ivory Coast, and Kenya, the work will be of interest to those working in the areas of international criminal justice, international law, legal theory, and international relations.

Subjects:
International Criminal Law, eBooks
Contents:
Preface
The responsibility to protect civilians from political violence: locating necessity between the rule and its exception
International criminal law: from hostis to hostia humani generis
Between necessity and contingency: representing legality as a Faustian pact
Global law: from force and law to aggression and legality
The deficiencies of law before overwhelming violence
A possible methodology of judicial discourse in marshaling, interpreting, and construing aggression clauses
Exclusion and inclusion: from biopolitics to biolegality
Abuse of legality: the illegal use of the legal
Reframing criminal aggression from outside to inside law
Legality and resolving ambiguity
Epilogue
Reference list
Index.