Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law

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COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved

from January 2007
Last Number: March 2023

Case Western Reserve University School of Law
ISSN 0008-7254


Cantidad de documentos en esta fuente: 422

January 01, 2007

  • Chaos in the courtroom: controlling disruptive defendants and contumacious counsel in war crimes trials.

  • The Saddam trial: challenges to meeting international standards of fairness with regard to the defense.

  • Transcript: preparing for the mother of all trials and lessons learned from Dujayl.

  • The poisonous precedent: how the Iraqi Special Tribunal undermines international law.

  • Transcript: analysis of the Dujail trial.

  • Lessons learned from the Iraqi High Tribunal: the need for an international independent investigation.

  • Debate: did Saddam get a fair trial?

  • A poisoned chalice: the substantive and procedural defects of the Iraqi High Tribunal.

  • Media matters: reflections of a former war crimes prosecutor covering the Iraqi tribunal.

  • ICC inability determinations in light of the Dujail case.

  • Transcript: lessons learned from the Dujail trial, a crossfire panel.

  • Appendix A.

  • September 22, 2007

  • Religious extremism and international legal norms: perfidy, preemption, and irrationality.

  • Psychological, theological, and thanatological aspects of suicidal terrorism.

  • Terror in the name of Islam - unholy war, not jihad.

  • Cyber embargo: countering the Internet Jihad.

  • Data protection conflicts between the United States and the European Union in the war on terror: lessons learned from the existing system of financial information exchange.

  • Re-thinking humanitarian aid in the post-Gulf War era: the International Committee of the Red Cross takes the lead.

  • The tribe, the empire, and the nation: enforceability of pre-revolutionary treaties with Native American tribes.

  • December 22, 2008

  • Origins of the genocide convention.

  • Origins of the Genocide Convention: from Nuremberg to Paris.

  • Acting before victims become victims: preventing and arresting mass murder.

  • Remarks on intervention.

  • Humanitarian intervention: the new missing link in the fight to prevent crimes against humanity and genocide?

  • Atrocity crimes framing the responsibility to protect.

  • "Boxed in" semantic indifference to atrocity.

  • "Genocide" - the power of a label.

  • Exploring critical issues in religious genocide: case studies of violence in Tibet, Iraq and Gujarat.

  • The International Criminal Court: seeking global justice.

  • The punishment and prevention of genocide: the International Criminal Court as a benchmark of progress and need.

  • International Court of Justice as a forum for genocide cases.

  • Investigative integration of the code of the higher Iraqi criminal court and the general principles of the Iraqi penal code: basic outcomes.

  • Defending individuals accused of genocide.

  • Enemies through the gates: Russian violations of international law in the Georgia/Abkhazia conflict.

  • Commentaries on the Genocide Convention: a reintroduction to Nehemiah Robinson.

  • The Genocide Convention: its origins and interpretation.

  • September 22, 2008

  • Experts meeting on security detention report.

  • International human rights law and security detention.

  • Administrative detention in armed conflict.

  • Practical challenges of implementing the complementarity between international humanitarian and human rights law - demonstrated by the procedural regulation of internment in non-international armed conflict.

  • Security detention, terrorism and the prevention imperative.

  • Security detention - United Kingdom practice.

  • Constitutional canaries and the elusive quest to legitimize security detentions in Canada.

  • A new system of preventive detention? Let's take a deep breath.

  • We're all experts now: a security case against security detention.

  • International standards for detaining terrorism suspects: moving beyond the armed conflict-criminal divide.

  • March 22, 2009

  • Nuremberg and crimes against peace.

  • Ending impunity for the crime of aggression.

  • The push to criminalize aggression: something lost amid the gains?

  • Aggression, humanitarian intervention, and terrorism.