Beschreibung
InhaltsangabeVictims of International Crimes: An Interdisciplinary Discourse.- Victim-Oriented Perspectives; Rights and Realities.- On Victims and Non-Victims: Observations From Rwanda. - The Status of Victims Under the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court.- The Individualising and Universalising Discourse of Law: Victims in Truth Commissions and Trials.- Redressing Sexual Violence in Transitional Justice and the Labelling of Women as "Victims".- Everyone Wanted to be Victim - How Victims of Persecution Disappear Within a Victimised Nation.- Transcending Victimhood: Child Soldiers and Restorative Justice.- The Protection of Victims in War Crimes Trials.- Victims as Witnesses - Views from the Defence.- Participation Rights of Victims as Civil Parties and the Challenges o Their Implementation Before the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia.- The ICC's Practice on Victim Participation.- Victims' Rights and Peace.- Victims, Excombatants, and the Communities: Irreconcilable Demands or a Dangerous Convergence? Victims of Genocide and Crimes Against Humanity.- Victims of Civil War.- Valorising Victims Ambivalences in Contemporary Trends in Transnational Justice.- A Reflection on Transnational Justice in Guatemala 15 Years After the Peace Agreements.- The Role and Mandates of the ICC Trust Fund for Victims.- From Victimhood to Political Protagonism: Victim Groups and Associations in the Process of Dealing with a Violent Past.- The Role of Cambodian Civil Society in the Victim Participation Scheme of the Extraordinary Chambers in the courts of Cambodia.- Critical Memory Studies and the Politics of Victimhood: Reassessing the Role of Victimhood Nationalism in Northern Ireland and South Africa.
Produktsicherheitsverordnung
Hersteller:
Springer Verlag GmbH
juergen.hartmann@springer.com
Tiergartenstr. 17
DE 69121 Heidelberg
Autorenportrait
InhaltsangabeVictims of International Crimes: An Interdisciplinary Discourse.- Victim-Oriented Perspectives; Rights and Realities.- On Victims and Non-Victims: Observations From Rwanda. - The Status of Victims Under the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court.- The Individualising and Universalising Discourse of Law: Victims in Truth Commissions and Trials.- Redressing Sexual Violence in Transitional Justice and the Labelling of Women as "Victims".- Everyone Wanted to be Victim - How Victims of Persecution Disappear Within a Victimised Nation.- Transcending Victimhood: Child Soldiers and Restorative Justice.- The Protection of Victims in War Crimes Trials.- Victims as Witnesses - Views from the Defence.- Participation Rights of Victims as Civil Parties and the Challenges o Their Implementation Before the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia.- The ICC's Practice on Victim Participation.- Victims' Rights and Peace.- Victims, Excombatants, and the Communities: Irreconcilable Demands or a Dangerous Convergence? Victims of Genocide and Crimes Against Humanity.- Victims of Civil War.- Valorising Victims Ambivalences in Contemporary Trends in Transnational Justice.- A Reflection on Transnational Justice in Guatemala 15 Years After the Peace Agreements.- The Role and Mandates of the ICC Trust Fund for Victims.- From Victimhood to Political Protagonism: Victim Groups and Associations in the Process of Dealing with a Violent Past.- The Role of Cambodian Civil Society in the Victim Participation Scheme of the Extraordinary Chambers in the courts of Cambodia.- Critical Memory Studies and the Politics of Victimhood: Reassessing the Role of Victimhood Nationalism in Northern Ireland and South Africa.