Treatise on international criminal law. Volume 1, Foundations and general part. Ambos, K. Oxford University Press, Oxford, England, First edition.. edition, 2013.
Treatise on international criminal law. Volume 1, Foundations and general part [link]Paper  abstract   bibtex   
Cover; Title Page; Copyright Page; Preface; Contents; Table of Cases; Table of Legislation; List of Abbreviations; List of Figures; A. The Versailles Peace Treaty and Historical Precedents; B. The First Ad Hoc Tribunals: Nuremberg and Tokyo; (1) The trials against the major war criminals of Germany and Japan; (2) Post-Nuremberg WWII trials; (3) The Nuremberg Principles as the immediate consequence of the Nuremberg Trials; C. The Development of International Criminal Law Prior to the Establishment of the UN Ad Hoc Tribunals; (1) The Genocide Convention; (2) The Hague and Geneva laws, (3) The Draft Codes of the International Law Commission(4) Private initiatives; D. The UN Ad Hoc Tribunals; (1) The International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia; (2) The International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda; E. The International Criminal Court; (1) Negotiating history; (2) The Rome Statute, the structure of the Court and other legal instruments; (a) General; (b) The judges; (c) The Office of the Prosecutor (OTP); (d) Registry, and Assembly of States Parties; (e) Legal sources; (f) The first Review Conference in Kampala; (3) Current investigations, (a) Situations and triggers(b) From situations to cases; F. The 'Mixed' Tribunals; (1) The legal bases; (a) Kosovo; (b) East Timor; (c) Sierra Leone; (d) Cambodia; (e) Iraq; (f) Lebanon; (g) Bangladesh; (2) Comparative analysis; Chapter I: Historical Overview: The Road from Early Prosecutions of War Crimes to the Creation of the ICC; A. Concept, Meaning, and Object of International Criminal Law; B. Punitive Power, Overall Function, and Purposes of Punishment; (1) The punitive power (ius puniendi) of the international community; (2) The overall function of (international) criminal law, (a) The theoretical starting point: protection of 'Rechtsgüter' and prevention of harm(b) The transfer to international criminal law; (3) On the purposes of punishment stricto sensu; (a) Traditional theories; (b) International criminal law; C. Sources and Methods of Interpretation; Chapter II: Concept, Function, and Sources of International Criminal Law; A. A General Part of International Criminal Law; B. Imputation in International Criminal Law; (1) Individuals acting in a collective context; (2) Individual responsibility; C. Fundamental Principles: Legality, Culpability, and Fairness, (1) Legality(2) Culpability; (3) Fairness; D. The Structure of Crime; (1) Preliminary remarks: the nature of crime and the question of 'the system'; (2) The structure of crime in ICL; Chapter III: Imputation and General Structure of Crime in International Criminal Law; A. The Recognition of Individual Criminal Responsibility in International Criminal Law; B. Historical Case Law on Individual Criminal Responsibility in ICL; (1) The Nuremberg, Tokyo, and UNWCC trials; (a) The applicable law; (b) Objective elements of individual responsibility (actus reus); (i) Causal connection?, (ii) Participation/complicity, Since the adoption of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court in 1998, international criminal law has rapidly grown in importance. This three-volume Treatise on International Criminal Law presents a foundational, systematic, consistent and comprehensive analysis of international criminal law. Taking into account the scholarly literature, not only sources written in English but also in French, German, Italian, Portuguese, and Spanish, the book draws on theauthor's extensive academic and practical work in international criminal law.This first volume addresses the foundations of inte
@book{ambos_treatise_2013,
	address = {Oxford, England},
	edition = {First edition..},
	title = {Treatise on international criminal law. {Volume} 1, {Foundations} and general part},
	isbn = {978-0-19-164886-1},
	url = {https://pmt-eu.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/f/1d5us72/41UNOG_Alma51194563920002391},
	abstract = {Cover; Title Page; Copyright Page; Preface; Contents; Table of Cases; Table of Legislation; List of Abbreviations; List of Figures; A. The Versailles Peace Treaty and Historical Precedents; B. The First Ad Hoc Tribunals: Nuremberg and Tokyo; (1) The trials against the major war criminals of Germany and Japan; (2) Post-Nuremberg WWII trials; (3) The Nuremberg Principles as the immediate consequence of the Nuremberg Trials; C. The Development of International Criminal Law Prior to the Establishment of the UN Ad Hoc Tribunals; (1) The Genocide Convention; (2) The Hague and Geneva laws, (3) The Draft Codes of the International Law Commission(4) Private initiatives; D. The UN Ad Hoc Tribunals; (1) The International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia; (2) The International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda; E. The International Criminal Court; (1) Negotiating history; (2) The Rome Statute, the structure of the Court and other legal instruments; (a) General; (b) The judges; (c) The Office of the Prosecutor (OTP); (d) Registry, and Assembly of States Parties; (e) Legal sources; (f) The first Review Conference in Kampala; (3) Current investigations, (a) Situations and triggers(b) From situations to cases; F. The 'Mixed' Tribunals; (1) The legal bases; (a) Kosovo; (b) East Timor; (c) Sierra Leone; (d) Cambodia; (e) Iraq; (f) Lebanon; (g) Bangladesh; (2) Comparative analysis; Chapter I: Historical Overview: The Road from Early Prosecutions of War Crimes to the Creation of the ICC; A. Concept, Meaning, and Object of International Criminal Law; B. Punitive Power, Overall Function, and Purposes of Punishment; (1) The punitive power (ius puniendi) of the international community; (2) The overall function of (international) criminal law, (a) The theoretical starting point: protection of 'Rechtsgüter' and prevention of harm(b) The transfer to international criminal law; (3) On the purposes of punishment stricto sensu; (a) Traditional theories; (b) International criminal law; C. Sources and Methods of Interpretation; Chapter II: Concept, Function, and Sources of International Criminal Law; A. A General Part of International Criminal Law; B. Imputation in International Criminal Law; (1) Individuals acting in a collective context; (2) Individual responsibility; C. Fundamental Principles: Legality, Culpability, and Fairness, (1) Legality(2) Culpability; (3) Fairness; D. The Structure of Crime; (1) Preliminary remarks: the nature of crime and the question of 'the system'; (2) The structure of crime in ICL; Chapter III: Imputation and General Structure of Crime in International Criminal Law; A. The Recognition of Individual Criminal Responsibility in International Criminal Law; B. Historical Case Law on Individual Criminal Responsibility in ICL; (1) The Nuremberg, Tokyo, and UNWCC trials; (a) The applicable law; (b) Objective elements of individual responsibility (actus reus); (i) Causal connection?, (ii) Participation/complicity, Since the adoption of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court in 1998, international criminal law has rapidly grown in importance. This three-volume Treatise on International Criminal Law presents a foundational, systematic, consistent and comprehensive analysis of international criminal law. Taking into account the scholarly literature, not only sources written in English but also in French, German, Italian, Portuguese, and Spanish, the book draws on theauthor's extensive academic and practical work in international criminal law.This first volume addresses the foundations of inte},
	language = {eng},
	publisher = {Oxford University Press},
	author = {Ambos, Kai},
	year = {2013},
	keywords = {International criminal law; Criminal procedure (International law); International criminal courts; Electronic books},
}

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