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Crime and Global Justice
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Table of Contents

  • Contents
  • List of tables
  • List of figures
  • List of abbreviations and acronyms
  • Preface and acknowledgements
  • Part IThe Evolution and Purpose of International Criminal Justice
  • 1.Towards a global system of criminal justice?
  • 2.Objectives and reality of international criminal justice
  • 3.Cosmopolitan principles of international criminal justice
  • Part IIInternational Criminal Justice in Action
  • 4.Universal jurisdiction. The proceedings against Augusto Pinochet
  • 5.Special international tribunals. Slobodan Milo evi and Radovan Karad i in The Hague
  • 6.Winners’ justice. The trial of Saddam Hussein
  • 7.The International Criminal Court in search of a defendant: Omar al-Bashir
  • Part IIIThe Future for Global Criminal Justice
  • 8.An assessment of global criminal justice
  • 9.What future for international tribunals?
  • 10.Justice from below: What can be done?
  • Epilogue
  • AppendixFilms and Novels on International Criminal Justice
  • References
  • Subject Index

About the Author

Daniele Archibugi is a Research Director at the Italian National Research Council (CNR-IRPPS) and Professor of Innovation, Governance and Public Policy at the University of London, Birkbeck College.

Alice Pease is a freelance researcher currently working on a modern slavery campaign at the House of Lords. She holds degrees from the universities of Edinburgh and Bologna and has worked for various think-tanks in Europe and Latin America.

Reviews

"If you are able to read only one book on international criminal justice let it be Crime and Global Justice. Brilliantly presented, lucidly reasoned, and remarkably balanced, it is certain to be an enduring scholarly contribution."
Richard A. Falk, Princeton University

Crime and Global Justice is a really good book. It combines an incredibly useful and readable introduction to the subject, a powerful critique of how it has worked in practice, and a message of hope for the future. A fundamental text for anyone who cares about the prospects for an international rule of law."
Mary Kaldor, London School of Economics and Political Science

“Both well-written and thorough…A timely reminder that the current international justice regime has not offered a silver bullet for complex political problems.”
LSE Review of Books

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