International criminal law has developed considerably in the last decade and a half, resulting in a complex and re-invigorated discipline. This has impacted directly on the popularity of the study of the subject, particularly on postgraduate law degrees. This textbook serves these courses by providing an introduction to the principles of international criminal law and processes. Written by four international lawyers with experience of teaching international criminal law, it is accessible yet sophisticated in its approach. It covers substantive international criminal law, the institutions designed to enforce it and their procedures, and the international law applicable to domestic prosecutions of international crimes. It will be essential reading for students and teachers of international criminal law. In addition, practitioners and researchers in the field (and in related fields such as criminal law), students of international law and international relations will find this introduction invaluable.
Had to read it for my course! This book explains the knowledge of International Criminal Law in a simple language! Not at all challenging for Non native speakers! Found it very helpful!
I have been having issues with my neighbor. Frankly, he disgusts me. He has been making my life so difficult, simply because he does not like how I raise my children. So I have taken matters into my own hands and I will sue this man for everything he has. This book is giving me so many ideas! My children are beautiful and healthy. My son, Crevin, needs to get his one-hour walk everyday, sometimes I am busy so I have to attach his leash to the family's drone to take him around the neighborhood. I don't think that makes me satan???? So Mr. Willis, be prepared to lose your house when I'm finished this book
I read this for my undergrad in Law when I studied international criminal law. It is easy to follow and explains all the basics you need to know and I would recommend it to anyone who is currently studying this area of law.
A problem I find common to many introductory texts in any of the various legal spheres is that they so often become carried away and forget their purpose; to provide a competent and relatively succinct summary of the relevant area of law while also setting the reader on the right path to further research if they desire to engage in it.
This newest edition brings up to date a work which had already succeeded in fulfilling each of those goals, being less a dusty tome and instead more an easily accessible guide, while being unabashed about leading the reader to materials which disagreed with the narrative put forward by the authors as often as not.
In particular, and as one might expect given its title, the work does not shy away from examining the procedural quirks of the newly formed ICC in spite of the limitations imposed by the paucity of jurisprudence, avoiding the understandable desire to focus solely upon the substantive and theoretical meat of the area which has seized other, otherwise excellent, works.
Just as Shaw has done with his own excellent work in the Public International sphere, Cryer and his co-authors do an excellent job providing a text which serves as both an engaging précis to the relatively nascent area of International Criminal Law and a fruitful gateway for further research.
Man in the pub, earlier today (19Nov2018, presumably available on CCTV): I don't know how you can read that book in this light.
This one's thought-bubble on the way home: well, you know, if it would be possible to access the court system to present claims and secure the fundamental rights and render any outstanding obligations, it may be helpful to understand what the legal advice is talking about. I'm reading a book, for goodness' sake. Think about that.