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- W4381888269 abstract "Extract We are very pleased to publish Dr Patryk I. Labuda’s important book, International Criminal Tribunals and Domestic Accountability in the Oxford Monographs in International Humanitarian and Criminal Law series. Both the topic and the author perfectly fit the series and its spirit: cross-cutting studies on topical issues by brilliant (young) scholars possibly with relevant practical experience in the field. The study tackles a lynchpin of international criminal law and does so with depth and competence. The debate on the primacy or complementarity of international criminal tribunals vis-à-vis domestic jurisdiction is one of the core areas of institutional difference between the foundational era of the United Nations ad hoc tribunals (and before them the Nuremberg and Tokyo experience) and the ‘new world’ of international criminal justice dominated by the establishment of the International Criminal Court (ICC) and the premise that justice is better delivered at the domestic level. There are several reasons for this shift, among them the idea that communities directly affected by the crimes are better served by accountability being established with greater proximity. The centrality of domestic jurisdiction in the ICC framework might have been a strategic diplomatic tool, indispensable to secure sufficient support by states and eventually gather consensus in a treaty-based system of international criminal justice. However, in international criminal justice more broadly, the centrality of domestic jurisdiction has been seen as a mechanism to render accountability more effective. In this respect, it must be recognized that already in the years immediately following the establishment of the Yugoslavia and Rwanda tribunals it had become clear that international tribunals located in countries away from the crime scenes were not ideal for establishing accountability for international crimes, as these tribunals could be perceived as distant entities which would never really understand the situation on the ground, let alone do justice for such serious crimes. The experiences of the Special Court for Sierra Leone, the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia, and other hybrid tribunals signalled shifting in this direction. Whether this shift was artificially motivated by political bias against the ad hoc tribunals or the genuine expression of a vision of justice as a process closer to directly affected communities is actually beside the point, since with the establishment of the ICC, the affirmation of a sort of primary duty of domestic jurisdictions became the rule." @default.
- W4381888269 created "2023-06-25" @default.
- W4381888269 date "2023-06-16" @default.
- W4381888269 modified "2023-09-27" @default.
- W4381888269 title "Series Editors’ Preface" @default.
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- W4381888269 doi "https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198868842.002.0006" @default.
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