Gaskins, Richard H.,

The Congo trials in the International Criminal Court / Richard Gaskins, Brandeis University, Massachusetts. - pages cm

Includes bibliographical references and index.

A Laboratory For Global Justice -- Spreading Justice to Distant Conflicts -- Balancing Politics, Morality, and Culture -- Ituri in the Web of Chaos : The Macro View -- Structures of Local Conflict : The Micro View -- Battling Impunity in Ituri -- ICC Structures, Dynamics, Tensions -- The Trial of Thomas Lubanga -- The Trial of Germain Katanga and Mathieu Ngudjolo -- The Trial of Jean-Pierre Bemba -- Observations.

"In July 2002, after hasty renovations to an old Dutch telecom building on the margins of The Hague, the International Criminal Court (ICC) opened its doors to the world. Created by treaty in 1998, the ICC was a bold response to the hopes of many nations for a more compelling way to enforce the fundamental rights of humanity. A permanent international court would soon begin to prosecute suspects accused of mounting attacks on innocent populations-even if those accused were government officials, including heads of state. Amid investigations in more than a half-dozen global trouble spots, the ICC launched its first courtroom trials by charging a handful of men from the Democratic Republic of Congo. The following chapters tell the story of these pioneering trials, which dominated the ICC's first decade of operation"--

9781108488013

2020006265


International Criminal Court.


War crime trials--Netherlands--Hague.
War crimes--Congo (Democratic Republic)--Ituri Region.

KZ1215 GAS 2020 / .G37 2020

341.6/90268