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مؤلف Aloisi, Rosa |
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Judgment day / Aloisi, Rosa
عنوان : Judgment day : judicial decision making at the international criminal tribunals نوع الوثيقة : نص مطبوع مؤلفين : Aloisi, Rosa, مؤلف ; Meernik, James David, مؤلف ناشر : Cambridge, United Kingdom [etc.] : Cambridge university press تاريخ النشر : 2017 عدد الصفحات : 243 p. Ill. : couv.ill. الأبعاد : 23 cm. ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 978-1-316-62573-6 ثمن : 5710.00 DA. اللغة : إنكليزي (eng) ترتيب : [كتب باللغة العربية] الكلمة المفتاح : 300 - Sciences sociales International criminal courts,Judgments,Judicial power تكشيف : 345 القانون الجنائي خلاصة : This book demonstrates how, after many years of inactivity after the World War II tribunals, judges at the Yugoslav, Rwanda and Sierra Leone tribunals, and to a lesser extent the International Criminal Court, have seized the opportunity to develop international law on war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide. Meernik and Aloisi argue that judges are motivated by a concern for human rights protection and the legacy of international criminal justice. They have progressively expanded the reach of international law to protect human rights and have used the power of their own words to condemn human rights atrocities. Judges have sentenced the guilty to lengthy and predictable terms in prison to provide justice, deterrence of future violations and even to advance peace and reconciliation. On judgment day, we show that judges have sought to enhance the power of international justice.-- Judgment day : judicial decision making at the international criminal tribunals [نص مطبوع ] / Aloisi, Rosa, مؤلف ; Meernik, James David, مؤلف . - Cambridge, United Kingdom [etc.] : Cambridge university press, 2017 . - 243 p. : couv.ill. ; 23 cm.
ISBN : 978-1-316-62573-6 : 5710.00 DA.
اللغة : إنكليزي (eng)
ترتيب : [كتب باللغة العربية] الكلمة المفتاح : 300 - Sciences sociales International criminal courts,Judgments,Judicial power تكشيف : 345 القانون الجنائي خلاصة : This book demonstrates how, after many years of inactivity after the World War II tribunals, judges at the Yugoslav, Rwanda and Sierra Leone tribunals, and to a lesser extent the International Criminal Court, have seized the opportunity to develop international law on war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide. Meernik and Aloisi argue that judges are motivated by a concern for human rights protection and the legacy of international criminal justice. They have progressively expanded the reach of international law to protect human rights and have used the power of their own words to condemn human rights atrocities. Judges have sentenced the guilty to lengthy and predictable terms in prison to provide justice, deterrence of future violations and even to advance peace and reconciliation. On judgment day, we show that judges have sought to enhance the power of international justice.-- نسخ(2)
Call number Media type Location وضع 345/8/34 Livre Droit جاهز 345/8/34 Livre Droit جاهز