Introduction Future perspectives on international criminal justice: Through the looking glass&Carsten Stahn & Larissa van den Herik 1
Part Ⅰ -The influence of scholars and practitioners on the development and conceptualization of international criminal law 9
Chapter 1 "Satires of circumstance': Some notes on war crimes trials and irony&Gerry Simpson 11
Chapter 2 The Banality of Evil on trial&AletteSmeulers & Wouter Werner 24
Chapter 3 Why international criminal lawyers should read Mirjan Damaska&Harmen van der Wilt 44
Chapter 4 The gentle humanizer of humanitarian law -Antonio Cassese and the creation of the customary law of non-international armed conflict&Tamas Hoffmann 58
Chapter 5 The international criminal legal process: Towards a realistic model of international criminal law in action&Christoph Burchard 81
Part Ⅱ - Theorizing international criminal justice 113
Chapter 6 The two liberalisms of international criminal law&Darryl Robinson 115
Chapter 7 International criminal law at the crossroads: From ad hoc imposition to a treaty-based universal system&Kai Ambos 161
Chapter 8 In search of the 'vertical': Towards an institutional theory of international criminal justice's core&Frederic Megret 178
Part Ⅲ - Re-assessing the balance between international and domestic jurisdiction 225
Chapter 9 Situational gravity under the Rome Statute&Kevin Jon Heller 227
Chapter 10 When law 'expresses' more than it cares to admit: Comments on Heller&Mark Osiel 254
Chapter 11 Should the prosecution of ordinary crimes in domestic jurisdictions satisfy the complementarity principle?&Dawn Sedman 259
Chapter 12 Interpreting complementarity and interests of justice in the presence of restorative-based alternative forms of justice&Marta Valinas 267
Chapter 13 Universal jurisdiction and the prosecution of excluded asylum seekers&Elizabeth Santalla 289
Part Ⅳ - De-individualizing international criminal law: Can abstract entities commit international crimes after all? 315
Chapter 14 The Inter-American Court of Human Rights and aggravated state responsibility: Operationalizing the concept of state crime&Scott Doucet 317
Chapter 15 Corporations as future subjects of the International Criminal Court: An exploration of the counterarguments and consequences&Larissa van den Herik 350
Chapter 16 Grey war zone? The question of contractual control of the privatization of warfare and the civilianization of the military&Dan Kuwait 369
Chapter 17 Holding private military corporations accountable for their crimes: The applicability of the commander/superior responsibility doctrine to crimes of PMCs&Materneau Chrispin 395
Part Ⅴ - Crime definitions revisited 423
Chapter 18 Defining the crime of aggression&Astrid Reisinger 425
Chapter 19 Complementarity and aggression: A ticking time bomb?&Nicolaos Strapatsas 450
Chapter 20 The recruitment and use of child soldiers: Some reflections on the prosecution of a new war crime&Michael E. Kurth 475
Part Ⅵ - System-criminality and the principle of personal fault: A balancing test in setting the appropriate standards for modes of liability 499
Chapter 21 The difficulty with individual criminal responsibility in international criminal law&Gideon Boas 501
Chapter 22 Current trends on modes of liability for genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes&Hector Olasolo Alonso 520
Chapter 23 From 'conspiracy' to 'joint criminal enterprise': In search of the organizational parameter&Athanasios Chouliaras 545
Part Ⅶ Towards one international criminal procedure? 583
Chapter 24 Trends in the development of a unified law of international criminal procedure&Goran Sluiter 585
Chapter 25 Witness memory and the manufacture of evidence at the international criminal tribunals&Alexander Zahar 600
Chapter 26 Remedies for war victims&Liesbeth Zegveld 611
Chapter 27 Victim participation in ICC proceedings&Nino Tsereteli 625
Chapter 28 Arrest and surrender under the ICC Statute - A contextual reading&Carsten Stahn 659
Index 687