ICTY: Towards a fair trial?:
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Format: | Buch |
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Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
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Neuer wissenschaftlicher Verl. [u.a.]
2008
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis Klappentext |
Beschreibung: | 416 S. |
ISBN: | 9789050958684 |
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084 | |a PR 2211 |0 (DE-625)139530: |2 rvk | ||
245 | 1 | 0 | |a ICTY: Towards a fair trial? |c ed. by Thomas Kruessmann |
264 | 1 | |a Wien [u.a.] |b Neuer wissenschaftlicher Verl. [u.a.] |c 2008 | |
300 | |a 416 S. | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
610 | 2 | 4 | |a International Tribunal for the Prosecution of Persons Responsible for Serious Violations of International Humanitarian Law Committed in the Territory of the Former Yugoslavia since 1991 |v Congresses |
650 | 4 | |a Criminal justice, Administration of |v Congresses | |
650 | 4 | |a Criminal procedure (International law) |v Congresses | |
650 | 4 | |a Fair trial |v Congresses | |
650 | 4 | |a International criminal courts |v Congresses | |
655 | 7 | |0 (DE-588)1071861417 |a Konferenzschrift |2 gnd-content | |
700 | 1 | |a Kruessmann, Thomas |e Sonstige |4 oth | |
856 | 4 | 2 | |m Digitalisierung UB Passau |q application/pdf |u http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=017378016&sequence=000003&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |3 Inhaltsverzeichnis |
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999 | |a oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-017378016 |
Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Table
of
Contents
Joseph
MARKO,
University of
Graz
(Austria)
Preface
......................................................................................................
7
List of Common Abbreviations
.................................................................19
Thomas KRUESSMANN, University of
Graz
(Austria)
Introduction
............................................................................................21
Truth-Finding and Trial Fairness:
Two Competing Goals?
Ksenija TURKOVIĆ,
University of Zagreb (Croatia)
The Value of the ICTY as a Historiographical Tool
........................ 29
1.
Introduction
.........................................................................................29
2.
Constraints in Providing a Historical Interpretation of the Past
...........32
3.
Performing the Work of Historical Memory the ICTY Puts at Risk
the Exercise of Justice
........................................................................40
4.
Conclusion
..........................................................................................42
Stefan
KIRSCH, Rechtsanwalt
(Germany)
Finding the Truth at International Criminal Tribunals
...................47
1.
Introduction
.........................................................................................47
2.
The Nature of the Proceedings before the ICC
...................................48
3.
Trial Practice before the ICTY and the ICTR
......................................52
4.
Major Differences between the Procedural Regimes
..........................56
5.
Proposal
.............................................................................................58
6.
Conclusion
..........................................................................................61
The Interrelationship of Substantive
/
Procedural Law
and its Relevance for a Fair Trial
Matjaž AMBROŽ,
University of Ljubljana (Slovenia)
A Need for Differentiation between Justification and Excuse in
International Criminal Law
...............................................................65
1.
Introduction
.........................................................................................65
2.
The Erdemović
Sentencing Judgment
................................................66
a. Background
...................................................................................66
b. Judge Cassese Dissenting
...........................................................68
3.
Two Extreme Positions
.......................................................................71
4.
The Differentiating Solution
................................................................74
5.
Conclusion
..........................................................................................75
Ivona
JOSIPOVIĆ,
University of Michigan (U.S.A.)
The ICTY s Approach to Customary Law: A Case Study of
the
Mens
Rea
of Imputed Command Responsibility
.....................77
1.
Introduction
.........................................................................................77
2.
Background
........................................................................................78
a. Post-World War II Case Law
.........................................................78
aa. Yamashita v. Styler
...............................................................78
bb. U.S. v.
von Listetal..............................................................79
cc.
U.S.
v.
von Leeb et
al
...........................................................80
dd.
Conclusion
............................................................................80
b.
Treaty Law
....................................................................................81
aa.
Additional Protocol to Geneva Convention
...........................81
bb. Draft Code of Crimes Against the Peace and Security
of Mankind
............................................................................83
cc. Rome Statute
.......................................................................83
dd. Conclusion
............................................................................84
3.
The ICTY s Approach to the
Mens
Rea
of Imputed Command
Responsibility
.....................................................................................84
a. The Statute of the ICTY
................................................................84
b. ICTY Case Law and the Application of the
Mens
Rea
Requirement
.................................................................................85
4.
Analysis of the ICTY s Interpretation of Customary Law
.....................89
a. Overview
.......................................................................................89
b. Nullum
Crimen
in International Criminal Law
................................89
с
No Violation of Nullum
Crimen
......................................................90
d.
Critics
............................................................................................90
e.
The Modern Approach to Custom
.................................................92
f. Conclusion
....................................................................................94
Kerstin
Bree
CARLSON, University of California, Berkeley (U.S.A.)
Joint Criminal Enterprise: The ICTY s Contentious Addition
to International Criminal Law
..........................................................97
1.
Introduction
.........................................................................................97
2.
Tadić
and the Development of Joint Criminal Enterprise
....................99
a. The Facts of
Tadić
........................................................................99
b.
The Law of
Tadić
........................................................................101
c.
The
Tadić
Appeals Chamber
......................................................103
d. Problems in
Tadić
.......................................................................105
3.
Kvočka
and the Evolution of Joint Criminal Enterprise
.....................106
a. Background of the Case
.............................................................106
b. Findings of the Trial Court
...........................................................108
c. Kvočka
Appeals Chamber
..........................................................110
d. Problems with
Kvočka
.................................................................111
4.
Gotovina
and the Future of Joint Criminal Enterprise
.......................114
5.
Conclusion
........................................................................................115
Kai
AMBOS,
University of
Göttingen
(Germany)
Joint Criminal Enterprise and Command Responsibility
...........117
1.
Joint Criminal Enterprise and Command Responsibility in
Modem Case Law: the Basics
..........................................................117
a. Joint Criminal Enterprise
.............................................................117
b. Command Responsibility
............................................................120
2.
The Simultaneous Application of JCE and Command
Responsibility
...................................................................................121
3.
Theoretical Considerations on JCE and Command
Responsibility
...................................................................................125
a.
ЈСБ
.............................................................................................125
aa. General
...............................................................................125
bb. JCE and the Traditional Law of Participation
......................126
cc. Classification with Regard to the Lex
Lata
..........................129
dd. JCE and the Principle of Culpability
....................................132
b. Command Responsibility
............................................................136
4.
Final Considerations: JCE, Command Responsibility and
Organisationsherrschaft...................................................................138
Fair Trial Standards in Human Rights Law as well as in
the Civil and Common Law Traditions
Roza
PATI,
St. Thomas University School of Law (U.S.A.)
Fair Trial Standards under Human Rights Treaty Law and
the ICTY: A Process of Cross-Fertilization?
................................147
1.
Introduction
.......................................................................................147
2.
Fair Trial Guarantees in Human Rights Law and Jurisprudence
......148
a. The Jurisprudence of the Human Rights Committee
..................148
aa. Right to Liberty and Security of Person
..............................148
bb. Righttoa Fair Trial
.............................................................150
cc. Right to Judicial Review
.....................................................154
dd. Freedom from Torture
........................................................155
b. The Jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights
......156
aa. Right to Liberty and Security of Person
..............................156
bb. Right to a Fair Trial
.............................................................156
cc. Right to Judicial Review
.....................................................159
3.
Fair Trial
Guarantees in the Statute and Rules of the ICTY
.............160
a. Overview
.....................................................................................160
b. Pre-Trial Rights
...........................................................................161
с
Rights at Trial
..............................................................................163
d. Rights to and in Appeal
...............................................................166
e. Conclusion
..................................................................................166
4.
The Impact of Human Rights Law and its Authoritative
Interpretation on the Jurisprudence of the ICTY
...............................167
a. Introductory Observations
...........................................................167
b. Fair Trial
......................................................................................168
aa. Nullum
crimen
sine
lege.....................................................168
bb. Right to Presumption of Innocence as Related to
Release Pending Trial
........................................................169
cc. Right to Be Tried Before an Independent and
Impartial Tribunal
................................................................171
dd. Equality of Arms
.................................................................172
ее.
Right to a Reasoned Opinion
.............................................173
с
Other Procedural Provisions
.......................................................173
aa. Stare decisis
.......................................................................173
bb. Contempt of Court
..............................................................174
d. Rules of Evidence
.......................................................................175
e. Sentencing
..................................................................................175
f. Right to Appeal
...........................................................................178
5.
The Impact of ICTY Statute, Rules and Case Law on Other
International Tribunals and Human Rights Courts and
Commissions
....................................................................................179
6.
Conclusion
........................................................................................183
Feruza DJAMALOVA
/
Rakhmadjon SOBIROV (Uzbekistan)
The Right to a Fair Trial: Common Law vs. Civil Law in the
ICTY Proceedings
...........................................................................185
1.
Introduction
.......................................................................................185
2.
The Concept of Fair Trial
..................................................................186
3.
Hearing by an Independent and Impartial Tribunal:
the Role of Judges
............................................................................188
a. Basic Concepts
...........................................................................188
b. The Role of Judges in the Common Law Procedural Model
.......189
с
The Role of Judges in the Civil Law Procedural Model
...............191
d. The ICTY: The Role of Judges in International Criminal
Proceedings
................................................................................192
4.
Equality of Arms between the Prosecution and the Defence
............195
a. Overview
.....................................................................................195
b. The Role of the Prosecution and Defence in the Common
Law Procedural Model
................................................................196
с
The Role of the Prosecution and Defence in the Civil Law
Procedural Model
........................................................................197
d. The ICTY: Equality of Arms
........................................................197
5.
Equality before the Law: Victims Fair Trial
.......................................200
a. Overview
.....................................................................................200
b. Victims Fair Trial in the Common Law Tradition
.........................201
с
Victims Fair Trial in the Civil Law Tradition
................................202
d. Victims Fair Trial in International Criminal Proceedings:
The ICTY s Experience
...............................................................203
6.
Conclusion
........................................................................................205
Albin ESER,
Director Emeritus of the Max-Planck-lnstitute for Foreign
and International Criminal Law, Freiburg (Germany), Former Judge at
the ICTY in The Hague (The Netherlands)
The Adversarial Procedure: A Model Superior to Other
Trial Systems in International Criminal Justice?
........................207
1.
Preliminary Remark
..........................................................................207
2.
Common Assumptions- Personal Concerns
...................................208
3.
The Objectives of International Criminal Justice as Criteria for
Success or Failure
............................................................................209
4.
The Length of Proceedings: Causes
................................................212
5.
Causes Conditioned by the Adversarial System
...............................216
a. The Proceeding as Party-driven rather than Judge-led
...............216
b. The Separation of the Prosecution Case and
Defence Case
...........................................................................218
6.
Changes Blocked by the Statute and
/
or the Procedural Structure?
.. 220
7.
The Need and Chance for Procedural Changes within the Basic
Adversarial Model
.............................................................................222
a. Measures for the Expediency of the Proceeding
.........................223
b. Measures for Ascertaining the Truth
...........................................224
с
Positive Side-effects upon the Mission of International
Criminal Justice
-
Outlook
..........................................................226
Protection of Victims as a New Fair Trial Dimension in
International Criminal Justice
Besa ARIFI,
South East European University (Republic of Macedonia)
Human Rights Aspects of Witness Protection and its
Importance for the ICTY
.................................................................231
1.
Introduction
.......................................................................................231
2.
The Balancing of Rights
...................................................................232
3.
The Anonymity Issue
........................................................................234
a. Introduction
.................................................................................234
b. The Case Law of the ECtHR
.......................................................235
с
The Case Law of the ICTY
..........................................................238
4.
The Chinkin-Leigh Debate Reconsidered
.........................................241
5.
Conclusion
........................................................................................247
Angela CARSTENSEN, Johann-Wolfgang-Goethe-University (Germany)
The Defendant s Right to a Fair Trial
-
Does Witness
Protection Violate the Defendant s Right to Confront
the Witness against Him?
..............................................................249
1.
Introduction
.......................................................................................249
2.
The Right to a Fair Trial under Article
6
ECHR and Article
14
ICCPR and Witness Protection in Criminal Proceedings
..................251
a. Overview
.....................................................................................251
b. Defining the Right to a Fair Trial
.................................................251
с
The Right to the Assistance of an Interpreter
..............................253
d. The Defendant s Right to Confront the Witness against Him
......254
e. Granting Anonymity
-
a Legitimate Measure to Protect
Witnesses?
.................................................................................255
3.
The Right to a Fair Trial and Witness Protection under the
Relevant ICTY Provisions
-
Curtailing the Defendant s Rights
or Necessary Limitation?
..................................................................257
a. Overview
.....................................................................................257
b. The Right to a Fair Trial
..............................................................258
с
Translation of Documents into the Language of the Accused
.....259
d. Disclosure of Evidence and Witness-related Material
.................260
e. Further Protective Measures
.......................................................263
f. Conclusion
..................................................................................266
4.
The Right to a Fair Trial under the Applicable Law in Bosnia and
Herzegovina
.....................................................................................266
a. Overview
.....................................................................................266
b. The Right to the Free Assistance of an Interpreter
.....................268
с
The Defendant s Right to Confront the Witness against Him
and Witness Protection
...............................................................270
aa. Overview
............................................................................270
bb. Safeguarding the Defendant s Right to a Fair Trial
-
the
Constitutional Court s and the Human Rights Chamber s
Jurisprudence at a Glance
..................................................270
cc. The Defendant s Right to a Fair Trial and Witness
Protection: The Case of A.P. and
Ž.C
................................273
dd. Assessment of the Constitutional Court s and the Human
Rights Chamber s Jurisprudence
........................................274
5.
The Protection of Victim-Witnesses in the Light of the Defendant s
Right to a Fair Trial in War Crimes Proceedings
...............................274
a. Overview
.....................................................................................274
b. Available Protective Measures under the Law on Protection
of Witnesses under Threat and Vulnerable Witnesses and the
ВІНСРС
...................................................,.................................275
с
The Defendant s Right to Confront the Witness against Him
in the Light of Witness Protection
................................................278
aa.
The Jurisprudence of the WCC
..........................................278
bb. Assessment of the WCC Jurisprudence
.............................281
6.
Conclusion
........................................................................................282
Romana
SCHWEIGER,
Associate Legal Officer ICTY,
OTP
(The Hague, The Netherlands)
Protecting Witnesses in International Criminal Trials: The
Experience of the ICTY
..................................................................283
1.
Introduction
.......................................................................................283
2.
The Particularities of Witnesses Protection at the Tribunal
..............283
3.
The Tribunal s Legal Framework for Witness Protection
..................284
4.
The Role of the Victims and Witnesses Section and Non-judicial
Protective Measures
.........................................................................287
5.
The Enforcement of Witness Protection
...........................................289
6.
Witness Protection in the Light of Co-operation with National
Courts
...............................................................................................291
7.
Concluding Remarks
........................................................................292
Gabriel AMANN (University of
Graz,
Austria)
Reparation for Victims in International Criminal Justice
............295
1.
Introduction
.......................................................................................295
2.
Retributive vs. Restorative Justice
....................................................296
3.
Reparation as a Key Concept of Victim Protection
...........................297
a. General Rule for Reparations in International Law
.....................297
b. The Victim s Right to Reparation
.................................................297
с
Enforcement of the Right to Reparation
......................................300
4.
Reparations in International Criminal Justice
...................................301
a. The Tribunals of Nuremberg and Tokyo
.....................................301
b. The ad hoc Tribunals for the Former Yugoslavia and Rwanda
... 301
с
The Reparations Regime of the International Criminal Court
......304
aa. Overview
............................................................................304
bb. The Legal Definition of the Victim
.......................................304
cc. The Right to Reparation before the ICC
.............................305
dd. The Trust Fund for Victims
.................................................306
5.
Conclusions
......................................................................................307
Selected Fair Trial Issues in the Law of International
Criminal Procedure
Ignaz
STEGMILLER,
University of
Göttingen
(Germany)
The Pre-lnvestigation Stage of the ICTY and ICC Compared
.....311
The Decision to Initiate an Investigation (Art.
18 (1)
ICTY Statute and
Art.
53 (1)
ICC Statute Respectively)
1.
Introduction
.......................................................................................311
2.
Procedural Law Sources of the ICTY/ICC
........................................312
a. Overview
.....................................................................................312
b. ICTY Statute
...............................................................................312
с
Rules of Procedure and Evidence
...............................................312
d. Other Specific Provisions
............................................................313
e. ICC Statute
.................................................................................313
f. ICC Rules of Procedure and Evidence
.......................................314
g. Other Specific Provisions of the ICC
...........................................315
3.
An Overview of the Proceedings at the ICTY/ICC
............................316
a. ICTY Proceedings
.......................................................................316
b. ICC Proceedings
.........................................................................317
4.
The Pre-lnvestigation Phase
............................................................319
a. The Trigger Mechanism, especially
proprio
motu
Proceedings according to Art.
15
ICC Statute
............................319
b. Communications under Art.
15
ICC Statute
................................323
5.
Decision to Initiate an Investigation (Art,
18 (1)
ICTY Statute and
Art.
15 (3), 53 (1)
ICC Statute respectively)
......................................328
a. Art.
18 (1)
ICTY-Statute: Prosecutorial Discretion (or
Opportunity Principle )
...............................................................328
b. Art.
53 (1)
ICC Statute: Generally Obligatory Prosecution
( Legality Principle )
....................................................................330
aa. The First and Second Parameters
......................................331
bb. Third Parameter
..................................................................332
cc. Fourth Parameter
...............................................................336
с
Conclusion
..................................................................................338
Stephen
C. THAMAN,
Saint Louis University (U.S.A.)
The Role of Plea and Confession Bargaining in International
Criminal Courts
...............................................................................341
1.
Plea Bargaining in Historical Perspective
.........................................341
2.
Current Trends in National Law
........................................................343
3.
Current Position in International Criminal Procedure Law
................345
4.
Conclusion
........................................................................................350
Károly BÁRD, Central
European
University
(Hungary)
The Defendant s Right to Be Present
-
Can the Right
Be Waived?
.....................................................................................351
1.
Introduction
.......................................................................................351
2
Is the Waiver of the Right to be Present at Trial Permissible at
all?
....................................................................................................
352
3.
Is Compelling the Accused to be Present Permissible?
...................357
4.
Are there Limits to Compulsion?
.......................................................360
5.
Conclusion
........................................................................................364
Sabine
SWOBODA,
University of Passau (Germany)
Admitting Relevant and Reliable Evidence
.................................. 365
The ICTY s Flexible Approach Towards the Admission of Evidence
under Rule 89(C) ICTY RPE
.............................................................365
1.
Introduction
.......................................................................................365
2.
The U.N. ad hoc Tribunals Rules on Admissibility
...........................366
a. The Basic Human Rights Framework for Admissibility
of Evidence
.................................................................................366
b. The Rules of Procedure and Evidence
.......................................367
с
The Trial Chamber Guidelines on Admissibility of Evidence
.......367
3.
The Concept of Admissibility, Reliability and Relevance
..................370
a. The Concept of Relevance
.........................................................370
b. The Concept of Probative Value
.................................................371
с
Reliablity as an Inherent Component of Admissibility
.................371
d. When to Determine Reliability, Relevance and Probative
Value?
.........................................................................................372
4.
The ICTY Case Law on Illegally Obtained Evidence
........................373
a. Possible Approaches towards Illegally Obtained Evidence
.........374
aa. Guarding the Court Against Distortions of the Truth-
Finding Process
..................................................................374
bb. Disciplinary Measures and Deterrence Rationale
...............374
cc. Exclusionary Concepts to Safeguard Judicial Integrity
.......375
(1)
Protective Objective Doctrine
.....................................376
(2)
Permitting the Accused to Control his Personal
Information
.................................................................377
(3)
The General Preference for Balancing Tests
.............377
b. Evidence Illegally Obtained under the Case Law of the ICTY
.....378
aa. Evidence Obtained in Violation of Human Rights
Standards During Interrogations of a Suspect or
Accused
..............................................................................379
(1)
Consequences of Denying an Interviewee the Status
of a Suspect
...............................................................379
(2)
Statements Obtained in Violation of the Right
to Counsel
..................................................................382
(3)
Inadequate Representation of Counsel
......................384
(4)
Violation
of the Right to be Informed of the
Charges
.....................................................................385
(5)
Information Obtained via Unlawful Modes of
Investigation
...............................................................386
(6)
Conclusion
.................................................................388
bb. Evidence Obtained in Violation of the Individual Right to
Privacy and Secrecy of Communications
...........................388
(1)
Illegal Telephone Intercepts
.......................................389
(2)
Evidence Obtained in Illegal Search and Seizure
Operations
.................................................................391
5.
Conclusion
........................................................................................392
Bibliography
...........................................................................................395
List of Contributors
.................................................................................415
development of international criminal justice which can now be
put aside and left to legal historians. It also has a lasting impact,
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|
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classification_rvk | PR 2211 |
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discipline | Rechtswissenschaft |
format | Book |
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genre | (DE-588)1071861417 Konferenzschrift gnd-content |
genre_facet | Konferenzschrift |
id | DE-604.BV035458112 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:35:43Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9789050958684 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-017378016 |
oclc_num | 316828934 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-739 |
owner_facet | DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-739 |
physical | 416 S. |
publishDate | 2008 |
publishDateSearch | 2008 |
publishDateSort | 2008 |
publisher | Neuer wissenschaftlicher Verl. [u.a.] |
record_format | marc |
spelling | ICTY: Towards a fair trial? ed. by Thomas Kruessmann Wien [u.a.] Neuer wissenschaftlicher Verl. [u.a.] 2008 416 S. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier International Tribunal for the Prosecution of Persons Responsible for Serious Violations of International Humanitarian Law Committed in the Territory of the Former Yugoslavia since 1991 Congresses Criminal justice, Administration of Congresses Criminal procedure (International law) Congresses Fair trial Congresses International criminal courts Congresses (DE-588)1071861417 Konferenzschrift gnd-content Kruessmann, Thomas Sonstige oth Digitalisierung UB Passau application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=017378016&sequence=000003&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis Digitalisierung UB Passau application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=017378016&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Klappentext |
spellingShingle | ICTY: Towards a fair trial? International Tribunal for the Prosecution of Persons Responsible for Serious Violations of International Humanitarian Law Committed in the Territory of the Former Yugoslavia since 1991 Congresses Criminal justice, Administration of Congresses Criminal procedure (International law) Congresses Fair trial Congresses International criminal courts Congresses |
subject_GND | (DE-588)1071861417 |
title | ICTY: Towards a fair trial? |
title_auth | ICTY: Towards a fair trial? |
title_exact_search | ICTY: Towards a fair trial? |
title_full | ICTY: Towards a fair trial? ed. by Thomas Kruessmann |
title_fullStr | ICTY: Towards a fair trial? ed. by Thomas Kruessmann |
title_full_unstemmed | ICTY: Towards a fair trial? ed. by Thomas Kruessmann |
title_short | ICTY: Towards a fair trial? |
title_sort | icty towards a fair trial |
topic | International Tribunal for the Prosecution of Persons Responsible for Serious Violations of International Humanitarian Law Committed in the Territory of the Former Yugoslavia since 1991 Congresses Criminal justice, Administration of Congresses Criminal procedure (International law) Congresses Fair trial Congresses International criminal courts Congresses |
topic_facet | International Tribunal for the Prosecution of Persons Responsible for Serious Violations of International Humanitarian Law Committed in the Territory of the Former Yugoslavia since 1991 Congresses Criminal justice, Administration of Congresses Criminal procedure (International law) Congresses Fair trial Congresses International criminal courts Congresses Konferenzschrift |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=017378016&sequence=000003&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=017378016&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT kruessmannthomas ictytowardsafairtrial |