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Archives for: December 2008, 09

60th Anniversary of the Genocide Convention: Impunity No More?

Permalink 09 December 08    Inside Justice ®   Renee Dopplick    Tags: United Nations, International Criminal Law    
Sixty years ago today on 9 December 1948, the UN General Assembly unanimously adopted the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide by Resolution 260 (III). Outside in the hallway, an unassuming lawyer from Warsaw sat alone upon the floor in tears. His fifteen years of effort to name and prohibit the crime of "genocide" was finally rewarded. For the man who asked, "Why is the killing of a million a lesser crime than the killing of a single individual?", Raphael Lemkin demonstrated what a difference a sole individual can make in shaping international law. Yet, despite Lemkin's efforts to ensure legal mechanisms to deter and punish future mass atrocities, the international community continues to struggle with the modern crime of genocide and the adequacy of mechanisms for international cooperation in the deterrence and punishment of the offenders. The Genocide Prevention Task Force concludes that the most important legal force to prevent genocide is a UN Security Council resolution, "if it is possible to obtain one." More


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Return of the State
This article is the extended address by José E. Alvarez, the Herbert and Rose Rubin Professor of International Law at New York University School of Law, at the University of Minnesota Law School's conference on "International Economic Law in a Time of Change." Alvarez relects upon and rebuts a collection of papers on supra-nationalism presented at the conference. He argues that states, as sovereign entities, are making a comeback. The full-text is available online for free.

Whither Justice? Uganda and Five Years of the International Criminal Court Michael Drexler argues that the International Criminal Court is pursuing an inappropriate engagement strategy in Uganda by ignoring the impacts of criminal prosecution and investigation on the prospects for peace to the country's decades-long conflict. It is published by the peer-reviewed Interdisciplinary Journal of Human Rights Law (IJHRL) and is available online for free.

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