Whose justice? Reconciling universal jurisdiction with democratic principles. Orentlicher, D. F. The Georgetown law journal, 92(6):1057–, 2004. Place: Washington Publisher: Georgetown University Law Center
Whose justice? Reconciling universal jurisdiction with democratic principles [link]Paper  abstract   bibtex   
Orentlicher examines the most trenchant challenge to universal jurisdiction. She claims that in exercising universal jurisdiction, courts and prosecutors are completely unaccountable to the citizens of the nation whose fate they are ruling upon.
@article{orentlicher_whose_2004,
	title = {Whose justice? {Reconciling} universal jurisdiction with democratic principles},
	volume = {92},
	issn = {0016-8092},
	shorttitle = {Whose justice?},
	url = {https://pmt-eu.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/f/772kv3/TN_cdi_proquest_journals_231476765},
	abstract = {Orentlicher examines the most trenchant challenge to universal jurisdiction. She claims that in exercising universal jurisdiction, courts and prosecutors are completely unaccountable to the citizens of the nation whose fate they are ruling upon.},
	language = {eng},
	number = {6},
	journal = {The Georgetown law journal},
	author = {Orentlicher, Diane F.},
	year = {2004},
	note = {Place: Washington
Publisher: Georgetown University Law Center},
	keywords = {Democracy, Extradition, Human rights, Immunities of foreign states, International law, Jurisdiction, Jurisdiction (International law), Justice, Laws, regulations and rules, Pinochet, Augusto},
	pages = {1057--},
}

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