enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. 1. The judges shall, in accordance with this Statute and the Rules of Procedure and Evidence, adopt, by an absolute majority, the Regulations of the Court necessary for its routine functioning. 2. The Prosecutor and the Registrar shall be consulted in the elaboration of the Regulations and any amendments thereto.

  3. Rome Statute, Art. 93(10)(b)(ii)(a) For a video, use a time indicator to cite to a particular moment: at 5:51 e.g. see example. During Coding, references to articles or other parts of the Rome Statute or the Genocide Convention will be wrapped in code that reveals that part on hover, e.g. see example.

  4. Summary. Cyber operations can constitute war crimes under the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court (ICC) when: they have been committed in the context of and in association with an armed conflict, kinetic or otherwise; they involve the elements of the crimes listed in Article 8 of the Rome Statute;

  5. Paywall. Beatty discusses whether “purely disruptive (as opposed to physically destructive) cyber operations could be prosecuted as war crimes at the International Criminal Court under Article 8 of the Rome Statute.”. She looks largely at the Tallinn Manual as an authoritative restatement on international cyber law.

  6. Understanding the International Criminal Court

    iccforum.com/media/background/performance/2013-08-22-ICC-Understanding_the_ICC.pdf

    into force of the Rome Statute on 1 July 2002.The International Criminal. Court is not a substitute for national courts. According to the Rome Statute, it is the duty of every State to exercise its criminal jurisdiction o. er those responsible for international crimes. The International Criminal Court can only intervene where a State is unable ...

  7. The ICC Trial Chamber III, in its judgment of March 21, 2016, found Mr. Bemba to be criminally responsible, under Article 28 (a) of the Rome Statute, for crimes against humanity and war crimes, including murder, rape, and looting committed by MLC troops. The Trial Chamber sentenced him to a total of eighteen years.

  8. Argument Continued II. Equality of Application, Not Equality of Condemnation A foundational principle of IHL is equality of application: that all parties to an armed conflict are bound by the same legal obligations.10 This principle applies to both international and non-international armed conflicts, and is reflected in the ICC’s jurisdiction as established by the Rome Statute.11 While there ...

  9. On December 6, 2017 he has been appointed as Advisor (Amicus Curiae) to the Colombian Special Jurisdiction for Peace. Judge Ambos is also since December 2013 Director of the Centro de Estudios de Derecho Penal y Procesal Penal Latinoamericano (CEDPAL) of Georg-August-Universität Göttingen. He serves as Editor-in-Chief of Criminal Law Forum ...

  10. Background Materials — Gravity. Relevant Treaties (in reverse chronological order) Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, Adopted by the United Nations Diplomatic Conference of Plenipotentiaries on the Establishment of an International Criminal Court, Jul. 17, 1998, U.N. Doc. A/CONF.183/9 [hereinafter Rome Statute], available online.

  11. The momentum for the establishment of an international criminal court finally came to fruition with the adoption of the Rome Statute by a UN -convened diplomatic conference on June 17, 1998. The Statute entered into force on July 1, 2002. The pivotal role of the UN in this process has been unmistakably dominant.