Paths to International Justice: Social and Legal Perspectives
This volume focuses on the everyday social relationships through which international justice is produced. Using case studies from the International Criminal Court, the European Court of Human Rights, the UN Women's Convention Committee and elsewhere, it explores international justice as a process that takes place at the intersection of the often contradictory practices of applicants, lawyers, bureaucrats, victims, accused and others. With a sensitivity to broader institutional and political inequalities, the contributors ask how and why international justice is mobilised, understood and abandoned by concrete social actors, and to what effect. An attention to the different voices that feed into international justice is essential if we are to understand its potentials and limitations in the midst of social conflict or full blown political violence.
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Paths to International Justice: Social and Legal Perspectives
This volume focuses on the everyday social relationships through which international justice is produced. Using case studies from the International Criminal Court, the European Court of Human Rights, the UN Women's Convention Committee and elsewhere, it explores international justice as a process that takes place at the intersection of the often contradictory practices of applicants, lawyers, bureaucrats, victims, accused and others. With a sensitivity to broader institutional and political inequalities, the contributors ask how and why international justice is mobilised, understood and abandoned by concrete social actors, and to what effect. An attention to the different voices that feed into international justice is essential if we are to understand its potentials and limitations in the midst of social conflict or full blown political violence.
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Paths to International Justice: Social and Legal Perspectives

Paths to International Justice: Social and Legal Perspectives

Paths to International Justice: Social and Legal Perspectives

Paths to International Justice: Social and Legal Perspectives

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Overview

This volume focuses on the everyday social relationships through which international justice is produced. Using case studies from the International Criminal Court, the European Court of Human Rights, the UN Women's Convention Committee and elsewhere, it explores international justice as a process that takes place at the intersection of the often contradictory practices of applicants, lawyers, bureaucrats, victims, accused and others. With a sensitivity to broader institutional and political inequalities, the contributors ask how and why international justice is mobilised, understood and abandoned by concrete social actors, and to what effect. An attention to the different voices that feed into international justice is essential if we are to understand its potentials and limitations in the midst of social conflict or full blown political violence.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780521709200
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 10/18/2007
Series: Cambridge Studies in Law and Society
Pages: 288
Product dimensions: 6.02(w) x 8.98(h) x 0.71(d)

About the Author

Marie-Bénédicte Dembour is a Senior Lecturer in Law at Sussex Law School, University of Sussex.

Tobias Kelly is a Lecturer in Social Anthropology at the School of Social and Political Studies, University of Edinburgh.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction - the social lives of international justice Tobias Kelly and Marie-Bénédicte Dembour; Part I. Paths…: 2. The success of failure? Minority supervision at the League of Nations Jane K. Cowan; 3. Law, civil society and contested justice at the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda Emily Haslam; 4. Transparent broadcast? The reception of Milo∫evic's trial in Serbia Jelena To∫ic; Part II. …to International…: 5. The limits of international justice at the European Court of Human Rights: between legal cosmopolitanism and 'a society of states' Basak Çali; 6. Global justice, local controversies: the International Criminal Court and the sovereignty of victims Kamari Maxine Clarke; 7. Human Rights Law as a path to International Justice: the case of the women's convention Sally Engle Merry; Part III. …Justice: 8. The house of ghosts: post-socialist property restitution and the European Court's rendition of human rights in Brumarescu v. Romania Filippo M. Zerilli and Marie-Bénédicte Dembour; 9. Entwined paths to justice: the inter-American human rights system and the Peruvian Truth Commission Lisa J. Laplante; 10. Same old story? Gypsy understandings of the injustices of non-Gypsy justice Sal Buckler.
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