The application of command responsibility in informal civilian relationships: for international crimes-lessons from the ICTR
LLM === Department of Public Law === Since the birth of international criminal justice, the imposition of individual criminal responsibility has been expanded as evidenced by the instruments establishing the institutional mechanisms, at least, from Nuremberg to the Rome Statute of the Internation...
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ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-univen-oai-univendspace.univen.ac.za-11602-9062020-05-07T03:17:20Z The application of command responsibility in informal civilian relationships: for international crimes-lessons from the ICTR Mhuru, Tapiwa Agripa Lansik, A. Jegede, A. A. Command Responsibility Informal civilian International crimes ICTR LLM Department of Public Law Since the birth of international criminal justice, the imposition of individual criminal responsibility has been expanded as evidenced by the instruments establishing the institutional mechanisms, at least, from Nuremberg to the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court. The prescriptions of the imposition of criminal responsibility in international criminal law take cognizance of the fact that both top civilian and military personnel commit heinous crimes. However, until the establishment of the International Criminal Tribunal of Rwanda (ICTR), such prescriptions covering individuals who find themselves within informal civilian relationships had not earned much focus, be it at the identification of responsible individuals to their prosecution and conviction. Events in Rwanda during the 1994 genocide that led to the establishment of the ICTR revealed the involvement of this category of individuals. While their involvement took diverse forms, at different times, only some of them were identified and successfully prosecuted and convicted for the offences over which the ICTR has jurisdiction. This category of individuals (those falling under the rubric of informal civilian relationships) has not been addressed by scholarship on international crimes. This dissertation identifies such individuals, examines the allegations against them, the factual findings of the different Trial Chambers and develops a set of rules as well as lessons to be learnt from the trial and appellate proceedings 2017-10-29T07:50:12Z 2017-10-29T07:50:12Z 2017-09-18 Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/11602/906 en University of Venda 1 online resource (vii, 107 leaves) |
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Command Responsibility Informal civilian International crimes ICTR |
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Command Responsibility Informal civilian International crimes ICTR Mhuru, Tapiwa Agripa The application of command responsibility in informal civilian relationships: for international crimes-lessons from the ICTR |
description |
LLM === Department of Public Law === Since the birth of international criminal justice, the imposition of individual criminal
responsibility has been expanded as evidenced by the instruments establishing the
institutional mechanisms, at least, from Nuremberg to the Rome Statute of the
International Criminal Court. The prescriptions of the imposition of criminal
responsibility in international criminal law take cognizance of the fact that both top
civilian and military personnel commit heinous crimes. However, until the
establishment of the International Criminal Tribunal of Rwanda (ICTR), such
prescriptions covering individuals who find themselves within informal civilian
relationships had not earned much focus, be it at the identification of responsible
individuals to their prosecution and conviction. Events in Rwanda during the 1994
genocide that led to the establishment of the ICTR revealed the involvement of this
category of individuals. While their involvement took diverse forms, at different times,
only some of them were identified and successfully prosecuted and convicted for the
offences over which the ICTR has jurisdiction. This category of individuals (those
falling under the rubric of informal civilian relationships) has not been addressed by
scholarship on international crimes. This dissertation identifies such individuals,
examines the allegations against them, the factual findings of the different Trial
Chambers and develops a set of rules as well as lessons to be learnt from the trial and
appellate proceedings |
author2 |
Lansik, A. |
author_facet |
Lansik, A. Mhuru, Tapiwa Agripa |
author |
Mhuru, Tapiwa Agripa |
author_sort |
Mhuru, Tapiwa Agripa |
title |
The application of command responsibility in informal civilian relationships: for international crimes-lessons from the ICTR |
title_short |
The application of command responsibility in informal civilian relationships: for international crimes-lessons from the ICTR |
title_full |
The application of command responsibility in informal civilian relationships: for international crimes-lessons from the ICTR |
title_fullStr |
The application of command responsibility in informal civilian relationships: for international crimes-lessons from the ICTR |
title_full_unstemmed |
The application of command responsibility in informal civilian relationships: for international crimes-lessons from the ICTR |
title_sort |
application of command responsibility in informal civilian relationships: for international crimes-lessons from the ictr |
publishDate |
2017 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/11602/906 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT mhurutapiwaagripa theapplicationofcommandresponsibilityininformalcivilianrelationshipsforinternationalcrimeslessonsfromtheictr AT mhurutapiwaagripa applicationofcommandresponsibilityininformalcivilianrelationshipsforinternationalcrimeslessonsfromtheictr |
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1719314501765955584 |