President on Trial

President on Trial

Prosecuting Hissene Habre

Weill, Sharon; Thuy Seelinger, Kim; Carlson, Kerstin Bree

Oxford University Press

05/2020

460

Dura

Inglês

9780198858621

15 a 20 dias

988

Descrição não disponível.
Foreword, Denis Mukwege, 2018 Nobel Peace Prize Co-recipient

Hissene Habre on Trial: Mapping the Long Road to Justice (Sharon Weill, Kim Thuy Seelinger, and Kerstin Carlson)

Part I. The Trial as Told by its Actors
Editors' Introduction

A. Early Prosecution Attempts (1982-2012)

1: The 'Archives of Terror', Olivier Bercault, Human Rights Watch coordinator of the case (2000- 2008).
2: The Making of Chad's Truth Commission, Judge Abakar Mahamat Hassan, President of the Chadian Truth Commission
3: Documenting Crimes and Organizing Victims in Chad, Souleymane Guengueng, Founder of the Association of Victims of Political Repression in Chad
4: Tenacity, Perseverance, and Imagination in the 'Private International Prosecution' of Hissene Habre, Reed Brody, Senior Counsel with Human Rights Watch and architect of Chadian victims' long campaign for justice
5: Defending Habre in Senegal During the Early Years, Helene Cisse, member of Habre's defence team in the first domestic proceedings in Senegal (1999-2001)
6: The Belgian Investigation of the Habre Regime, Excerpt of EAC trial testimony of Daniel Fransen, Belgian Investigating Judge
7: In His Own Words: An Interview with Hissene Habre, Excerpted interview from La Gazette, Dakar, 2011

B. Establishing the Court

8: Creating the EAC in Senegal: Perspectives from the African Union, Ben Kioko, Former Legal Counsel to the Commission of the African Union and judge on the African Court on Human and People's Rights
9: Arresting Habre, Marcel Mendy, Coordinator of the EAC Communications Unit
10: Investigations in Senegal and Chad: Cooperation and Challenges, Judge Jean Kande, Investigating judge at the EAC
11: Managing the EAC, Amadou Mokhtar Seck, EAC Administration and Finance Office
12: Professionalizing a Political Trial: A Clerk's Perspective, Abouly Ba, clerk at the EAC

C. The Trial

13: Prosecuting International Crimes in Senegal, Mbacke Fall, EAC Prosecutor
14: Defending Habre, Mounir Ballal, court-appointed defense lawyer before the EAC
15: From Victim to Witness and the Challenges of Sexual Violence Testimony, Jacqueline Moudeina, Victims' Legal Counsel before the EAC
16: Supporting Victims at Trial: Civil Parties' Perspective, Alain Werner and Emmanuelle Marchand, Legal consultants for Civil Parties during the trial
17: Can we be friends? Offering an Amicus Curiae Brief to the EAC, Kim Thuy Seelinger, Naomi Fenwick, Khaled Alrabe, UC Berkeley
18: The Habre Trial Judgement: A Summary of the First Instance Judgements of the EAC, Elise Le Gall, International Criminal Law expert with the EAC Office of the Prosecutor
19: The Habre Appeals Decision: A Summary of the Appeal Decision of the EAC, Elise Le Gall
20: Reflections on the Habre Appeals Decision, Judge Ouagadeye Wafi, EAC Appeals Chamber
21: The Real Fight Begins; Victims Struggle for an Effective Right to Reparation, Gaelle Carayon and Jeanne Sulzer (Redress/FIDH)

D. Beyond the Courtroom

22: A Donor's Perspective, Sarah Valentina Fall, Human Rights and Human Security program, Swiss Embassy in Dakar
23: Outreach for the EAC: An Extraordinary Experience, Franck Petit, team leader for the Outreach Consortium on the EAC
24: Covering Habre: The Diary of a Local Journalist, Ngoundji Dieng, Senegalese Journalist for Senegalese daily, The Quotidien
25: Prosecutions in Chad, Henri Thulliez, Senior coordinator for Human Rights Watch
26: Academia as Partner in the Habre Trial, Erick Sullivan and Fannie Lafontaine, The Clinic for International Criminal and Humanitarian Law (CDIPH), Laval University, Canada

Part II. Reflections on the Significance of the Habre Case and Beyond
Editors' Introduction

A. Portraits, Positionality, Paradigms

27: Africa Against Global Justice? Stakes for Building a Political Sociology on the Futures of International Criminal Justice, Sara Dezalay
28: The Habre trial and the Malabo Protocol: An Emerging African Criminal Justice?, Ndeye Amy Ndiaye
29: Expertise in the Bench? The Dis-Embeddedness of International Criminal Justice, Julien Seroussi
30: Hybrid Justice and the Rights of the Defence: Existence at the Periphery, Dov Jacobs

B. Institutions, Norms, and Pillars

31: Hybrid: A Spectrum of Possibilities, Mark Kersten and Kirsten Ainley
32: "Civil Law" v. "Common Law" Criminal Procedure: The Key or the Lock for ICL Success, Leila Bourguiba
33: The ICJ's Senegal v. Belgium Judgment and the Obligation to Prosecute or Extradite Alleged Torturers: The Case of Al Bashir and the ICC, Manuel Ventura and Victor Baiesu
34: Victims as a Third Party at the ICCL Empowerment of Victims?, Liesbeth Zegveld

C. Capturing the Judicial Process: Actors and Dynamics

35: "We Will Not Go Away": The Participation of Victims in International Criminal Tribunals, Eric Stover and Stephen Cody
36: Reparations and the Habre Trial in Context, Christophe Sperfeldt
37: Hybrid Courts and Amicus Curiae Briefing, Sarah Williams
38: "Sexualized Slavery" and Customary International Law, Patricia Sellers and Jocelyn Kestenbaum
39: Witness Protection, Nancy Combs

D. The Political and its Interaction: Captured Institutions?

40: Hissene Habre, the Little Bird on the Brance, and the Challenges of International Criminal Justice, Pierre Hazan
41: The ICC and Africa, Richard Goldstone
42: The 'Habre Effect', Universal Jurisdiction and Courts in Africa, Mia Swart
43: Main Challenges and the Future of International Criminal Law, William Schabas
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