Darryl Robinson
University of Toronto
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Archive | 2007
Robert Cryer; Hakan Friman; Darryl Robinson; Elizabeth Wilmshurst
Introduction The assertion of criminal jurisdiction over a person is amongst the most coercive activities any society can undertake. Punishing a person involves conduct towards them which requires a deprivation of some form of their liberty or a setting-back of their property interests. Such a deprivation of liberty or property requires justification. Furthermore, criminal law is not, in itself, a good or a bad thing. It is a tool, designed to achieve certain ends. Some of those ends may be better pursued by means other than prosecutions. It has been suggested by some that the justifications for punishment may differ, or at least be differently interpreted, between international criminal law and domestic criminal law. It is true that the general situations in which international criminal law is invoked are those of mass criminality, which are not the normal case in domestic criminal law enforcement. In addition, certain additional aims for international criminal law tend to be grafted onto those which are postulated for domestic systems of criminal law. These include the telling of the history of a conflict, distinguishing individual from group responsibility, reconciling societies and capacity building in domestic judicial systems. It is also true that international society is not the same as domestic society. Nonetheless, much of the implementation of international criminal law is intended to be at the domestic level, therefore it is questionable whether the objectives of punishment ought to differ that significantly between international and municipal criminal law.
Archive | 2010
Robert Cryer; Hakan Friman; Darryl Robinson; Elizabeth Wilmshurst
The statute of the International Criminal Court is now in force and the court has begun its first investigations. Other conflicts and more investigations are being considered. The first investigations in the DRC and Uganda are based on these states referring crimes committed on their own territory to the court, an unexpected development. Such a move has been encouraged by the courts prosecutor, hoping that this will enhance the states crucially needed cooperation in the investigations. The prosecutor has announced some core policies: a positive approach to cooperation, a focused prosecutorial strategy aimed at the perpetrators who are most responsible, and a limited number of cases. Other preparations for the investigations have been made. This paper provides an update on recent developments regarding the court and points out some challenges, including the operations of the court vis-a-vis other peace efforts.
Archive | 2010
Robert Cryer; Hakan Friman; Darryl Robinson; Elizabeth Wilmshurst
Part I. Introduction: 1. Introduction: what is international criminal law? 2. The aims, objectives and justification of international criminal law Part II. Prosecutions in National Courts: 3. Jurisdiction 4. National prosecutions of international crimes 5. State cooperation with respect to national proceedings Part III. International Prosecutions: 6. The history of international criminal prosecutions: Nuremberg and Tokyo 7. The ad hoc international criminal tribunals 8. The International Criminal Court 9. Other courts with international elements Part IV. Substantive Law of International Crimes: 10. Genocide 11. Crimes against humanity 12. War crimes 13. Aggression 14. Transitional crimes, terrorism and torture 15. General principles of liability 16. Defences/grounds for excluding criminal responsibility Part V. Principles and Procedures of International Prosecutions: 17. Procedures of international criminal investigations and prosecutions 18. Victims in the international criminal process 19. Sentencing and penalties Part VI. Relationship between National and International Systems: 20. State cooperation with the International Courts and Tribunals 21. Immunities 22. Alternative and complements to criminal prosecution 23. The future of international criminal law.
Archive | 2010
Robert Cryer; Hakan Friman; Darryl Robinson; Elizabeth Wilmshurst
Introduction International criminal law, or something similar to it, has a very long history. Its closest European precursor before the modern era was the chivalric system that applied in the medieval era. The most notable of the trials that were related to this system was that of Peter von Hagenbach in Breisach in 1474. Although its status as a legal precedent is highly limited, the issues involved at that trial, superior orders, sexual offences, cooperation in evidence gathering, and pleas as to the jurisdiction of the court, have clear present-day relevance. The purpose of this chapter, however, is to introduce the modern history of international criminal prosecutions rather than provide a comprehensive overview of the entire history of the subject. Therefore we will start in the early part of the twentieth century, at the end of the First World War. The commission on the responsibility of the authors of the war After the First World War, the Allies set up a fifteen-member commission to investigate the responsibility for the start of the war, violations of the laws of war and what tribunal would be appropriate for trials. It reported in March 1919, determining that the central powers were responsible for starting the war and that there were violations of the laws of war and humanity. It recommended that high officials, including the Kaiser, be tried for ordering such crimes and on the basis of command responsibility.
Archive | 2010
Robert Cryer; Hakan Friman; Darryl Robinson; Elizabeth Wilmshurst
Introduction International criminal law has developed at an unprecedented rate since the early 1990s and is now an established part of the international scene and of the academic curriculum. It is too early to issue any final judgments, but it is the purpose of this chapter to evaluate recent developments as far as possible, and to look tentatively to the future of international criminal law. International courts and tribunals The catalyst for the revival of international criminal law was the creation of the ad hoc Tribunals by the Security Council in the early to mid 1990s. Although the project for an international criminal court had received some increased attention since its re-inclusion on the General Assembly’s agenda in 1989, this was not seen as likely to bear fruit. However, the creation of the ad hoc Tribunals showed that such tribunals could be established in a reasonably short time, and the focus of debate shifted from the question whether such tribunals were a realistic possibility to how they could be improved. The ad hoc Tribunals were criticized almost from the start as being expensive and bureaucratic, as well as producing what some consider to be show trials. Nonetheless, these experiments (as that is what they were at their beginnings) have to be credited not only with a reasonable level of success in their own proceedings, but also with providing the impetus for the creation of what many thought was a near impossibility in the international legal order, a permanent international criminal court.
Archive | 2010
Robert Cryer; Hakan Friman; Darryl Robinson; Elizabeth Wilmshurst
Introduction Criminal law and proceedings are at the heart of state sovereignty and cooperation in criminal matters is a voluntary undertaking; a State is not obliged to cooperate with others in criminal matters unless it has agreed to do so. But over time, the parochial view that criminal law, including its effects, is local in nature has given way to an ever-growing need for and actual regulation of international legal cooperation. Influential factors in this regard are increased cross-border activities, including the commission of crimes, international terrorism and the development of human rights. International crimes are of concern to all States and therefore lend themselves to efforts at cooperation. A commitment to cooperate, in the form of extradition, is the alternative to prosecution in accordance with the aut dedere, aut judicare principle, when applicable. Cooperation is particularly important when the State is exercising jurisdiction over crimes committed abroad, but may also be necessary when a State is investigating and prosecuting crimes committed on its own territory. Prosecution of genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes is no exception. But international law, treaty and custom has not (yet) developed a special regime for State-to-State cooperation concerning these crimes. The Geneva Conventions and Additional Protocol I, for example, explicitly refer to cooperation in accordance with domestic legislation. One must therefore resort to general principles and provisions of international and domestic law on international cooperation in criminal matters.
Archive | 2007
Robert Cryer; Hakan Friman; Darryl Robinson; Elizabeth Wilmshurst
This market-leading textbook gives an authoritative account of international criminal law, and focuses on what the student needs to know – the crimes that are dealt with by international courts and tribunals as well as the procedures that police the investigation and prosecution of those crimes. The reader is guided through controversies with an accessible, yet sophisticated, approach by the author team of four international lawyers with experience of teaching the subject, and as negotiators at the foundation of the International Criminal Court (ICC) and the Rome Conference. It is an invaluable introduction for all students of international criminal law and international relations, and now covers developments in the ICC and victims’ rights alternatives to international criminal justice. The book is supplemented by an extensive package of online resources (www.cambridge.org/law/cryer), which offers convenient access to primary sources, well-chosen excerpts for supplementary reading, problems and questions for reflection and discussion, and materials for exercises and simulations.
Archive | 2007
Robert Cryer; Hakan Friman; Darryl Robinson; Elizabeth Wilmshurst
The international criminal courts and tribunals which deal with perpetrators of atrocities are an established part of the effort to bring an end to impunity for international crimes. This leading textbook gives an authoritative account of international criminal law, and focuses on what the student needs to know – the crimes that are dealt with by international courts and tribunals as well as the procedures that govern the investigation and prosecution of those crimes. The reader is guided through controversies with an accessible, yet sophisticated, approach. The four authors have rich experience as lawyers in this field, as teachers of the subject, and as negotiators at the establishment of the International Criminal Court (ICC). The book covers new developments in the case law and the practice and is essential reading for students and teachers of international criminal law and international relations. It is supplemented by a package of online resources (www.cambridge.org/law/cryer3), which offers convenient access to primary sources, excerpts for supplementary reading, problems and questions for reflection and discussion, and materials for exercises and simulations.
Archive | 2007
Robert Cryer; Hakan Friman; Darryl Robinson; Elizabeth Wilmshurst
Part I. Introduction: 1. Introduction: what is international criminal law? 2. The aims, objectives and justification of international criminal law Part II. Prosecutions in National Courts: 3. Jurisdiction 4. National prosecutions of international crimes 5. State cooperation with respect to national proceedings Part III. International Prosecutions: 6. The history of international criminal prosecutions: Nuremberg and Tokyo 7. The ad hoc international criminal tribunals 8. The International Criminal Court 9. Other courts with international elements Part IV. Substantive Law of International Crimes: 10. Genocide 11. Crimes against humanity 12. War crimes 13. Aggression 14. Transitional crimes, terrorism and torture 15. General principles of liability 16. Defences/grounds for excluding criminal responsibility Part V. Principles and Procedures of International Prosecutions: 17. Procedures of international criminal investigations and prosecutions 18. Victims in the international criminal process 19. Sentencing and penalties Part VI. Relationship between National and International Systems: 20. State cooperation with the International Courts and Tribunals 21. Immunities 22. Alternative and complements to criminal prosecution 23. The future of international criminal law.
Archive | 2007
Robert Cryer; Hakan Friman; Darryl Robinson; Elizabeth Wilmshurst
Introduction Overview To focus only on the ‘core crimes’ and their prosecution would be to ignore a substantial area of criminal law with international implications; there are other crimes of international concern which have a huge impact on global economic development and on people’s general welfare. Crimes which are the subject of international suppression conventions, but for which there is as yet no international criminal jurisdiction, are the focus of this chapter. They are here termed ‘transnational crimes’. These are crimes which have actual or potential transboundary effects. We include torture in this chapter because, although it does not have a cross-border element, it is dealt with by the international community in the same way as transnational crimes properly so-called. The prevention and punishment of transnational crimes requires cooperation among governments and among law enforcement agencies. A growing number of agreements are being concluded to provide for this in relation to such crimes as drugs trafficking, piracy, slavery, terrorism offences, torture, apartheid, enforced disappearances, corruption, transnational organized crime including people trafficking, smuggling migrants and illegal arms trafficking. Some of these are also covered by customary international law or are international crimes when committed in certain circumstances (for example, as crimes against humanity). They include those which were listed as ‘treaty crimes’ in the ILC draft of the ICC Statute, but which were excluded from the final Rome Statute in the course of the negotiations. Particular transnational crimes may in the future come to be dealt with as international crimes within the jurisdiction of an international court, if States believe that the values they conflict with are sufficiently important to the international community and that international prosecution is an effective way of dealing with them. New transnational crimes emerge, as States develop new suppression conventions.