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Submissions for IICJ Issue Two!

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ISSUES IN INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL JUSTICE (IICJ)

The IICJ is the Journal of the International Criminal Court Student Network (ICCSN). It is edited and published jointly by the various chapters of the ICCSN at Cambridge University, the London School of Economics, and Duke University.

For the 2009 – 2010 academic year, the Journal will focus on articles relating to the recent history of the International Criminal Court, as well as articles discussing alternative models for dealing with international criminal justice (though articles on other topics will be considered).

SUBMISSIONS TO THE JOURNAL

Submissions should be sent to  This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
All submissions must be received by 11 January 2010.

Articles should be between 2000 and 5000 words long and submitted in an editable, unlocked Microsoft Word document. Note, however, that quality is the main focus, and not quantity. Submissions should be formatted in Times New Roman 12pt font, and double-spaced.

Submissions should be accompanied by a short biography of the author, including academic degrees, qualifications, and background. A short abstract for each article of several sentences should also be included.

If you have any concerns about the length of your article, or any other questions or concerns, please feel free to contact the editorial team at the address above.

PLEASE NOTE: Submission of a manuscript implies a commitment to publish in the IICJ if accepted. Authors should not simultaneously submit to other journals, nor should manuscripts have been published elsewhere in substantially similar form or content.

Authors will receive the result of the Editorial Board’s review by February 11th. If an article is accepted, authors will receive comments and requests for edits by February 25th, and will be expected to submit a final, revised article by March 11th.

ASSESSMENT CRITERIA

Manuscripts will be reviewed by the IICJ Editorial Board. Authors will be notified of the result of the review at each level. When reviewing submissions, the editorial staff will focus primarily on the clarity of argument, writing style, and professional quality (including citations and references).


 

 

International Court to Begin Inquiry Into Kenya Violence

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NAIROBI, Kenya
— After months of political wrangling, the chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court said Thursday that he would initiate an inquiry into what he termed crimes against humanity during the post-election bloodletting that gripped Kenya in 2008.

The investigator, Luis Moreno-Ocampo, met with President Mwai Kibaki and Prime Minister Raila Odinga before he made the announcement to reporters. “I explained to them that I consider the crimes committed in Kenya were crimes against humanity, therefore the gravity is there. So therefore I should proceed,” Mr. Moreno-Ocampo said.

In the post-election clashes more than 1,000 people were killed, hundreds of thousands were displaced, and Kenya’s image as one of Africa’s most stable and promising countries was seriously damaged. But since then, politicians of various stripes have been reluctant to investigate what really happened.Mr. Kibaki and Mr. Odinga, who have both been accused by critics of stalling any meaningful investigation, said they remained committed to working with the International Criminal Court. “We don’t want see a repeat of what we saw last year,” Mr. Odinga said.

Several senior government ministers have been accused by human rights groups of being the ringleaders of the bloodshed that followed the election in December 2007. On Thursday, Kenyan human rights activists seemed jubilant about the pending investigation.

“I have been a strong and consistent supporter of the International Criminal Court involvement in Kenya at the top levels and then a Special Court for lower levels,” said Maina Kiai, a former government human rights official.

“I am elated! And I hope he follows the evidence and gets the big fish in a balanced way,” he added, referring to Mr. Moreno-Ocampo.

The inquiry followed growing expectations among Kenyans, who have been waiting to hear who masterminded the bloodshed and who would pay the price.

A Kenyan commission investigated the violence in October 2008 and came up with a list of several top suspects, widely believed to include some of the nation’s most powerful men. The names were sealed in a square brown paper envelope and handed over to Kofi Annan, the former secretary general of the United Nations who took on the role of peacemaker.

Kenyan politicians had promised Mr. Annan that they would form a special tribunal to try the suspects here, ending a longstanding culture of impunity that feeds the ethnic-political bloodshed that convulses Kenya nearly every election.

But Kenya’s leaders, paralyzed by competing agendas and the prospect of prosecuting their own, have refused to set up a tribunal. So, earlier this year, Mr. Annan upped the ante. He sent the envelope with the names to the International Criminal Court at The Hague, which indicated that it would step in if Kenya failed to act.

Mr. Moreno-Ocampo said he told Mr. Kibaki and Mr. Odinga that he would seek permission from court officials to start the inquiry.

“So I informed them, in December I would request to the judges of the International Criminal Court to open an investigation, and that is the process established by the Rome Treaty,” Mr. Moreno-Ocampo said. He was referring to a treaty in 2002 that set up the International Criminal Court as the first permanent tribunal with the power to try individuals on charges including war crimes, genocide and major violations of human rights.

The issue of responsibility for the post-election bloodletting evokes profound political sensitivities.

In February, Parliament shot down a bill to set up a special Kenyan court for perpetrators, and lawmakers indicated there was little appetite for the proposal.“If we leave it to Parliament, and I say this as an individual and not on behalf of my organization, Parliament will not pass a tribunal unless they are sure the tribunal will be dysfunctional,” Victor Kamau, a lawyer at the Kenya National Commission on Human Rights, said at the time.

The names in the envelope have not been made public. But Kenyans have their suspicions. Several Western diplomats and human rights officials have said that Finance Minister Uhuru Kenyatta, the son of Kenya’s founding president, and Agriculture Minister William Ruto are on the list, suspected of organizing death squads.

The two men are from different ethnic groups and opposite political camps, with Mr. Kenyatta, a Kikuyu, in the president’s party, and Mr. Ruto, a Kalenjin who quickly scaled the rungs of the leading opposition movement. One reason for the paralysis over the tribunal may be that both sides, for once, have the same vested interest: continuing the impunity.

The violence erupted after election organizers proclaimed Mr. Kibaki, the incumbent, to be the victor, drawing protests from Mr. Odinga. After the violence, Mr. Kibaki and Mr. Odinga agreed to set up a national unity government, which took power in April 2008.

Neither leader apparently wished to initiate the proceedings at the international court for fear of provoking a political crisis among former allies who might find themselves among the accused. The Standard, a newspaper in Nairobi, said Wednesday that both men agreed to let Mr. Moreno-Ocampo take the lead to forestall a backlash, Reuters reported.

Jeffrey Gettleman reported from Nairobi, and Alan Cowell from Paris. Originally posted at The New York Times

Last Updated ( Monday, 09 November 2009 14:15 )
 

Congratulations to Basel University

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As we continue to expand to universities and youth around the world, the International Criminal Court Student Network (ICCSN) is proud to announce the start of our newest chapter at Basel University, Switzerland.The ICCSN is an international network that brings together university students interested in the ICC and international criminal justice, and serves as a forum for discussion and information dissemination on issues of international criminal law and the Court itself.


Congratulations to:

Campus President: Mr. Pascal Lochiger

Campus Vice President: Mr. Adrian Kägi

Campus Secretary and Vice President of Finance: Ms. Jeannine Pigeon

Vice President of Public Relations: Ms. Raphaela Cueni

Vice President of Campaigns: Ms. Danielle Breitenbücher

Vice President of Events: Ms. Ann Weibel

Vice President of Communications: Ms. Marina Piolino

Campus Editor: Ms. Kathrin Betz


Last Updated ( Friday, 06 November 2009 09:47 )
 

New group to focus on Int'l criminal law

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This month, Duke law students launched the nation's first chapter of the International Criminal Court Student Network. The group sponsored a training session last Friday.

The event, sponsored by the Center for International and Comparative Law, Duke School of Law and Duke Bar Association, featured speakers from the International Criminal Court's Office of the Prosecutor. The ICCSN was founded in 2006 at the London School of Economics to serve as a means of communication and education for students around the globe to learn about the ICC, a United Nations judicial organization to which the United States is not yet committed.

"There is a huge interest among law students in most schools in the field of international criminal law. You can see it at Harvard [University], McGill [University], and now you see it starting at Duke and the students seem to be taking initiative and generating a lot of momentum in the field," said Noah Weisbord, visiting assistant professor of law who has assisted Duke's ICCSN chapter in connecting with experts in the field.

Law students and professors filed into a classroom in the Law School Friday for a one-day program that marked the ICCSN's first event. They attended three consecutive panels to discuss the day-to-day workings of the OTP, a broader overview of the court and opportunities for students to become involved in the field of international criminal justice. Guest speakers were Antonia Pereira de Sousa, an associate cooperation officer within the jurisdiction, complementarity and cooperation division of the OTP and Horejah Bala-Gaye, an assistant trial lawyer for the Prosecution Division of the OTP.

During her presentation, Bala-Gaye emphasized the importance of universal involvement in the court.

"Everyone's involvement is necessary to end impunity and prevent further crimes around the world," she said.

A UN body signed the Rome Statute in 1998 to found the ICC, an international court that could try war crimes and crimes against humanity. Although the United States is not one of the 110 countries currently part of the ICC, its relationship with the court has evolved since the statute went into effect in 2002, said Matthew Smith, second-year law student and president and founder of Duke's chapter of the ICCSN.

"In the beginning of the Bush administration, it was a relationship of outright opposition because of concerns that are not totally legitimate, that are based on lack of understanding over how the Court actually works. So a big part of our mission with ICCSN is to serve a public education role so there aren't misconceptions about how the Court works," he said. "We don't necessarily endorse or oppose the idea of the U.S. signing onto the Rome Statute. We would like to see the US support the work of court, but the primary goal is [to ensure] that debate about the court's work is based on correct information rather than politicized information."

Smith said he decided to found Duke's ICCSN chapter after meeting Pereira de Sousa at a conference about Darfur held at the Law School last year. She encouraged him to contact ICCSN leaders at LSE and the University of Cambridge, following which he assembled the executive board for Duke's chapter this Fall, composed of mostly first and second-year law students.

"It's... an excellent opportunity for these students to lead a movement because the fundamental point is that because the court is a permanent court, it will need confident, committed people from every generation to support its work and we are sort of the next wave of people working for the court," Smith said.

 

Fore more information on ICCSN @ Duke University, click here.

Last Updated ( Friday, 06 November 2009 09:25 )
 

Clinton: It is a 'great regret' the US is not in International Criminal Court

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Hillary Clinton, the secretary of state, signals shift by the US in favour of the International Criminal Court

Hillary Clinton has signalled a significant shift by the US in favour of the international criminal court, the world body that pursues war criminals but was strenuously opposed by the Bush administration.

In the most public expression of support yet from Barack Obama's administration, the US secretary of state expressed regret that the US has not yet joined the ICC.

The court, set up in 2002, has pursued dictators, mainly from Africa, who are alleged to have been engaged in genocide and other war crimes.

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