Foreword | p. v |
Acknowledgements | p. ix |
Summary of Contents | p. xi |
Abbreviations | p. xix |
Introduction | |
The Genocide Convention Sixty Years After its Adoption | p. 3 |
Legal remarks | p. 5 |
Historical remarks | p. 7 |
The legal and historical reflections | p. 9 |
Historical development and public policy considerations | p. 9 |
Legal issues | p. 12 |
Case studies | p. 13 |
Genocide and the International Court of Justice | p. 14 |
Historic cases: contemporary witnesses | p. 14 |
Future prospects | p. 15 |
Historical Development | |
Genocide in International Law and International Relations Prior to 1948 | p. 19 |
Human rights, the United Nations and the drive for war crimes prosecutions | p. 22 |
Crimes against humanity and the drafting of the 1948 Genocide Convention | p. 24 |
Closing the impunity gap | p. 30 |
Conclusions | p. 32 |
'Genocide' at Nuremberg, 1945-1946 | p. 35 |
Lemkin in Washington, spring 1945 | p. 36 |
Lemkin in London, late summer 1945 | p. 41 |
'Genocide' in the Nuremberg Indictment, October 1945 | p. 44 |
'Genocide' during the Nuremberg trial, November 1945-September 1946 | p. 47 |
Conclusion | p. 53 |
The United Nations and the Origins of the Genocide Convention 1946-1948 | p. 55 |
Chronological outline | p. 56 |
Basic questions | p. 57 |
Great Power interests and the negotiations for the Genocide Convention | p. 58 |
Conclusion | p. 66 |
Strtategies for 'Genocide Trials' after World War II - How the Allied Powers Dealt with the Phenomenon of Genocide in Occupied Germany | p. 69 |
Preliminary remarks: defining humanity | p. 69 |
European experiences with mass violence | p. 70 |
The path to Nuremberg | p. 71 |
Institutionalisation efforts | p. 74 |
The United Nations War Crimes Commission | p. 75 |
National jurisdictions after World War II | p. 77 |
Military courts | p. 77 |
Non-military courts under Control Council Law No. 10 | p. 78 |
The principle of non-interference in domestic affairs | p. 79 |
Punishing crimes committed before the war | p. 79 |
The Holocaust and the Genocide Convention of 1948 | p. 83 |
Holocaust/Shoah and the legal term Genocide | p. 84 |
Anti-semitism | p. 85 |
1938-the World Community and the Evian Conference | p. 87 |
The conference begins | p. 89 |
Conference failure and the consequences | p. 92 |
Public Policy Considerations | |
Genocide Prevention and the Dynamics of Conflict | p. 99 |
Groups and intergroup processes | p. 99 |
Intergroup violence | p. 101 |
Prevention and treatment of violence and genocide | p. 104 |
War Crimes, Genocide Trials and Vergangenheitspolitik - the German Case | p. 109 |
Germany and international law after 1945: A case of 'post-Nuremberg reflex'? | p. 109 |
'Nuremberg' and its effects on German perceptions of genocide trials | p. 113 |
'Coming to terms with the past' by means of criminal law? | p. 120 |
Conclusion | p. 123 |
Genocide and the Genocide Convention in Israel | p. 125 |
Interpretation of the Crime of Genocide | |
The Policy Element in Genocide: When is it Required by International Rules? | p. 133 |
The Two Notions of Genocide: Distinguishing Macro Phenomena and Individual Misconduct | p. 141 |
The'social'concept of genocide | p. 141 |
The'legal'concept of genocide | p. 143 |
The'systemic'nature of genocide | p. 145 |
Individual misconduct | p. 148 |
Proving genocide | p. 149 |
Conclusion | p. 152 |
Different Forms of Participation in Genocide | p. 153 |
Legal basis for complicity in international criminal law | p. 153 |
Differentiation of the different forms of participation | p. 155 |
Derivation of a limitation of participation from the criterion of intention in genocide | p. 159 |
Result | p. 161 |
The Special Intent Requirement in the Crime of Genocide | p. 163 |
The basic structure and aim of the crime of genocide | p. 165 |
Basic structure | p. 165 |
Aim of the norm | p. 167 |
Subjective requirements | p. 168 |
Ordinary intent | p. 169 |
Special intent | p. 170 |
Applicability of Article 30 ICCSt | p. 170 |
Interpretation of the special intent | p. 171 |
Knowledge-based interpretation | p. 171 |
Will-based interpretation | p. 173 |
Individual requirements | p. 174 |
Destroy | p. 174 |
In whole or in part | p. 176 |
The proof of special intent | p. 177 |
Summary and future prospects | p. 179 |
Case Studies | |
The Challenges of Genocide Trials: 'The Cambodian Situation' | p. 183 |
The structure of the Extraordinary Chambers | p. 184 |
Challenges faced by the Extraordinary Chambers | p. 185 |
Political challenges | p. 185 |
Legal and procedural challenges | p. 187 |
Evidentiary challenges | p. 190 |
Practical challenges | p. 191 |
Challenges confronted by Cambodian Society | p. 191 |
Conclusion | p. 193 |
The International Criminal Court and the Crime of Genocide | p. 195 |
Introduction | p. 195 |
The crime of genocide as defined in the ICC's legal framework | p. 197 |
The concept of genocide - from Lemkin to Article 6 of the Rome Statute | p. 197 |
The concept of genocide as specified in the Elements of Crimes | p. 199 |
The Crime of Genocide as applied in the ICC's recent practice | p. 201 |
Procedural and historical background | p. 201 |
The majority's decision not to include the charges of genocide in the warrant of arrest | p. 202 |
The contextual element | p. 203 |
The specific elements | p. 204 |
Existence of a protected group | p. 204 |
The specific intent requirement | p. 204 |
Judge U¿acka's 'Separate and Partly Dissenting Opinion' | p. 206 |
The Prosecutor's application for leave to appeal pursuant to Article 82(1)(d) of the Statute | p. 207 |
Conclusion | p. 209 |
The Crime of Genocide Applied in Practice - Selected Aspects of the Jurisprudence of the ad hoc Tribunals' Appeals Chambers | p. 213 |
Introduction | p. 213 |
The protected group | p. 215 |
The destruction of the group | p. 222 |
'In whole or in part … as such' | p. 225 |
Proving genocidal intent | p. 232 |
Conclusion | p. 233 |
International Genocide Trials: Three Case Studies | p. 235 |
Introduction | p. 235 |
Ntakirutimana | p. 235 |
Zigiranyirazo | p. 238 |
Bikindi | p. 240 |
Conclusion | p. 242 |
Genocide and the International Court of Justice | |
The ICJ Judgment in the Bosnian Genocide case and Beyond: A Need to Reconceptualise? | p. 245 |
Introduction | p. 245 |
History of proceedings | p. 246 |
Subject-matter jurisdiction of the ICJ in genocide cases | p. 247 |
The scope of primary obligations under the Genocide Convention | p. 248 |
The applicability of the concept of state responsibility | p. 250 |
The Court's criminal law analysis | p. 251 |
The Court's line of reasoning | p. 251 |
The need to reconceptualise | p. 253 |
The missing piece | p. 254 |
Conclusion and suggestions for the future conceptualisation | p. 257 |
Genocide and the International Court of Justice | p. 259 |
Introduction | p. 259 |
On the duty to prevent genocide | p. 261 |
Distinguishing between a failure to prevent genocide and complicity in its commission | p. 263 |
The 'reinforcing' effect of provisional measures orders on Serbia's obligations | p. 264 |
Can a state commit genocide? | p. 264 |
Attribution of responsibility for genocide | p. 265 |
What is an 'organ of state'? | p. 268 |
Attribution to a state of genocide committed by persons who are not state organs | p. 269 |
Reparation | p. 270 |
Conclusion | p. 271 |
Historic Cases | |
The Trial of Adolf Eichmann and Other Genocide Trials | p. 275 |
The Auschwitz Trial at the Landgericht Frankfurt and its Importance for the Prohibition of Genocide | p. 287 |
The Nuremberg Trial 1945-1946 | p. 299 |
List of Contributors | p. 305 |
Index | p. 309 |
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