Tomas Hamilton
King's College London
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Publication
Featured researches published by Tomas Hamilton.
International Criminal Law Review | 2014
Tomas Hamilton; Michael Ramsden
The use of ‘hybrid’ tribunals as a means to secure accountability for international crimes seeks to combine national ownership over the trials whilst providing a framework for the inclusion of international standards and personnel in the proceedings. The Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC) represents one such hybrid experiment. Yet the ECCC has faced recurring allegations of political interference - allegations which are substantial and create, at the least, an appearance of impropriety. The failure of the ECCC and United Nations to adequately address these allegations derived from a hybrid model that did not provide sufficient safeguards against interference. The international community agreed on a solution to secure accountability with awareness that the trials were likely to be politically tainted. As such, the experiment in Cambodia provides a cautionary tale for the future design of hybrid tribunals.
International and Comparative Law Quarterly | 2017
Michael Ramsden; Tomas Hamilton
This article evaluates the role of the UN General Assembly (‘UNGA’) and its subsidiary organs in acting as a catalyst for action at the International Criminal Court (‘ICC’). The power of the UN Security Council (‘UNSC’) to make a referral to the ICC has been increasingly challenged in recent years, due to the perceived misuse of the veto by permanent members and general failings to enforce international criminal law in the face of documented atrocities. Meanwhile, the UNGA and its subsidiary organs have exerted meaningful pressure on the UNSC through the creation of commissions of inquiry and country-specific resolutions. There is the possibility for the UNGA to engage in dialogue with the ICC through ‘quasi-judicial’ resolutions, in coordinating collective responses to a recalcitrant State and individual perpetrators and also through the possible assumption of a referral power. This analysis reveals that the UNGA has become increasingly active in international justice and holds the potential for an enhanced role in addressing the failings of the current UNSC-dominated paradigm governing UN–ICC relations, thereby facilitating States in ‘uniting against impunity’.
Archive | 2017
Tomas Hamilton
Brill | 2017
Tomas Hamilton
Archive | 2016
Tomas Hamilton
Archive | 2016
Tomas Hamilton
Criminal Law Forum | 2016
Tomas Hamilton
The Law and Practice of International Courts and Tribunals | 2015
Tomas Hamilton
Archive | 2015
Tomas Hamilton
Archive | 2015
Tomas Hamilton