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Description
The Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (‘Rome Statute’ and ‘ICC‘) emerged following years of interest from various governments in establishing a permanent court to prosecute perpetrators of international crimes. The treaty that eventually established the ICC was the result of inter-governmental negotiations, which were ultimately successful in large part due to the ‘tribunal fatigue’ of governments concerned by “the financial and political costs of creating ad hoc United Nations (‘UN’) criminal tribunals for the atrocities that burdened so many regions of the world”. A permanent court would “provide greater efficiencies in addressing the investigation and prosecution of atrocity crimes”, but drafting the parameters of the Rome Statute required several years of work by legal experts and diplomats from a majority of the world’s governments.
ISBN
9788283481730
Publication Date
2021
Publisher
Torkel Opsahl Academic EPublisher
Disciplines
Courts | Criminal Law | Criminal Procedure | International Humanitarian Law | International Law | Law
Repository Citation
Shannon Fyfe, Politics and the Institutional Integrity of the ICC, in The Past, Present, and Future of the International Criminal Court (Alexander Heinze & Viviane Dittrich eds., 2021),
https://scholarlycommons.law.wlu.edu/fac_books/197
Included in
Courts Commons, Criminal Law Commons, Criminal Procedure Commons, International Humanitarian Law Commons, International Law Commons