New Histories of International Criminal Law
New Histories of International Criminal Law
Retrials
Skouteris, Thomas; Tallgren, Immi
Oxford University Press
03/2019
278
Dura
Inglês
9780198829638
15 a 20 dias
584
List of Contributors
1: Immi Tallgren and Thomas Skouteris: Editors Introduction
2: Gerry Simpson: Unprecedents
3: Founding Moments and Founding Fathers: Shaping Publics through
the Sentimentalization of History NarrativesKamari Maxine Clarke:
4: From the Sentimental Story of the State to the Verbrecherstaat, Or,
the Rise of the Atrocity ParadigmLawrence Douglas:
5: International Criminal Justice History Writing as Anachronism:
The Past that Did Not Lead to the PresentFrederic Megret:
6: Redeeming Rape: Berlin 1945 and the Making of Modern
International Criminal LawHeidi Matthews:
7: Voglio una donna!: On Rewriting the History of International
Criminal Justice with the Help of Women Who Perpetrated
International CrimesImmi Tallgren:
8: Writing More Inclusive Histories of International Criminal
Law: Lessons from the Slave Trade and SlaveryEmily Haslam:
9: The Africa Blue Books at Versailles: The First World War, Narrative,
and Unthinkable Histories of International Criminal LawChristopher Gevers:
10: Crimes Against Humanity: Racialized Subjects and
Deracialized HistoriesVasuki Nesiah:
11: Nazi Atrocities, International Criminal Law, and Soviet War
Crimes Trials: The Soviet Union and the Global Moment
of Post-Second World War JusticeFranziska Exeler:
12: Aleksi Peltonen: Theodor Meron and the Humanization of International Law
13: Mark Drumbl: Histories of the Jewish Collaborator: Exile, Not Guilt
Index
List of Contributors
1: Immi Tallgren and Thomas Skouteris: Editors Introduction
2: Gerry Simpson: Unprecedents
3: Founding Moments and Founding Fathers: Shaping Publics through
the Sentimentalization of History NarrativesKamari Maxine Clarke:
4: From the Sentimental Story of the State to the Verbrecherstaat, Or,
the Rise of the Atrocity ParadigmLawrence Douglas:
5: International Criminal Justice History Writing as Anachronism:
The Past that Did Not Lead to the PresentFrederic Megret:
6: Redeeming Rape: Berlin 1945 and the Making of Modern
International Criminal LawHeidi Matthews:
7: Voglio una donna!: On Rewriting the History of International
Criminal Justice with the Help of Women Who Perpetrated
International CrimesImmi Tallgren:
8: Writing More Inclusive Histories of International Criminal
Law: Lessons from the Slave Trade and SlaveryEmily Haslam:
9: The Africa Blue Books at Versailles: The First World War, Narrative,
and Unthinkable Histories of International Criminal LawChristopher Gevers:
10: Crimes Against Humanity: Racialized Subjects and
Deracialized HistoriesVasuki Nesiah:
11: Nazi Atrocities, International Criminal Law, and Soviet War
Crimes Trials: The Soviet Union and the Global Moment
of Post-Second World War JusticeFranziska Exeler:
12: Aleksi Peltonen: Theodor Meron and the Humanization of International Law
13: Mark Drumbl: Histories of the Jewish Collaborator: Exile, Not Guilt
Index