International Criminal Law as Cosmopolitan Right in Reverse
In: Jurisprudence (forthcoming)
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In: Jurisprudence (forthcoming)
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In: Michigan Journal of International Law, Band 43
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In: American journal of international law: AJIL, Band 113, Heft 4, S. 727-771
ISSN: 2161-7953
AbstractThe scope of international criminal jurisdiction poses a fundamental challenge for criminal law theory. Prevailing justifications for the state's authority to punish crime assume the existence of connections between the state and either the criminal or the crime that are not always present in the international criminal context. Recognizing this gap, this Article introduces a new theory of what distinguishes international crimes from domestic crimes and justifies the unusual scope of international criminal jurisdiction. As this Article explains, international crimes are unique in the way they undermine international society's structure as a system of sovereign states.
In: Supreme Court Law Review (2020)
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Working paper
In: American Journal of International Law (2019)
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In: New York University journal of international law & politics, Band 46, Heft 4, S. 1097-1191
ISSN: 0028-7873
In: The Canadian yearbook of international law: Annuaire canadien de droit international, Band 50, S. 95-161
ISSN: 1925-0169
SummaryThis article addresses the unresolved question of the international legal status, and resulting rights, of Omar Khadr — a Canadian national detained by the United States on the battlefield in Afghanistan at the age of fifteen and subsequently incarcerated at Guantanamo Bay. The article focuses primarily on Khadr's potential status as an "unlawful combatant" and as a child soldier. Acknowledging that there has been a great deal of scholarly debate surrounding these issues, it provides an overview of this debate through the lens of Khadr's particular case. As the author observes, international law surrounding each aspect of Khadr's status is far from clear. However, even accepting the existence of controversy and ambiguity surrounding Khadr's status, the author argues that the United States and Canada have, seemingly, sought to exploit this ambiguity in order to justify disregard for his rights. The article concludes by observing that this approach is, in itself, contrary to the foundational principles of international humanitarian law.
In: New York University Journal of International Law and Politics (JILP), Vol. 46, pp. 1097-1191, 2014
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In: 50 The Canadian Yearbook of International Law 95 (2012)
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In: University College London Human Rights Review, Band 4, S. 52-73
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In: Historical Origins of International Criminal Law, Vol. 3, ch.12, p. 429 (Morten Bergsmo, CHEAH Wui Ling, SONG Tianying and YI Ping eds., 2015)
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In: 46 Cornell International Law Journal 499 (2013)
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