Commentary (Victim Participation in the International Criminal Court)

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportKommentarForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Commentary (Victim Participation in the International Criminal Court). / Marchuk, Iryna.

Annotated Leading Cases of International Criminal Tribunals: The International Criminal Court 2006-2008. red. / André Klip; Steven Freeland. Bind 39 Intersentia, 2014. s. 278-286 (Annotated Leading Cases of International Criminal Tribunals, Bind 39).

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportKommentarForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Marchuk, I 2014, Commentary (Victim Participation in the International Criminal Court). i A Klip & S Freeland (red), Annotated Leading Cases of International Criminal Tribunals: The International Criminal Court 2006-2008. bind 39, Intersentia, Annotated Leading Cases of International Criminal Tribunals, bind 39, s. 278-286. <http://www.intersentia.com/searchDetail.aspx?bookid=101866>

APA

Marchuk, I. (2014). Commentary (Victim Participation in the International Criminal Court). I A. Klip, & S. Freeland (red.), Annotated Leading Cases of International Criminal Tribunals: The International Criminal Court 2006-2008 (Bind 39, s. 278-286). Intersentia. Annotated Leading Cases of International Criminal Tribunals Bind 39 http://www.intersentia.com/searchDetail.aspx?bookid=101866

Vancouver

Marchuk I. Commentary (Victim Participation in the International Criminal Court). I Klip A, Freeland S, red., Annotated Leading Cases of International Criminal Tribunals: The International Criminal Court 2006-2008. Bind 39. Intersentia. 2014. s. 278-286. (Annotated Leading Cases of International Criminal Tribunals, Bind 39).

Author

Marchuk, Iryna. / Commentary (Victim Participation in the International Criminal Court). Annotated Leading Cases of International Criminal Tribunals: The International Criminal Court 2006-2008. red. / André Klip ; Steven Freeland. Bind 39 Intersentia, 2014. s. 278-286 (Annotated Leading Cases of International Criminal Tribunals, Bind 39).

Bibtex

@inbook{e494db38fe2d4ebbb883c879a986bb84,
title = "Commentary (Victim Participation in the International Criminal Court)",
abstract = "Victim participation is one of the most innovative aspects introduced in the legal framework of the International Criminal Court (hereinafter – ICC), which has not featured in the practices of other international criminal courts and tribunals. The approach of the ad hoc tribunals to victims was very {\textquoteleft}consumer like{\textquoteright} because victims were solely used as witnesses to testify about the crimes attributed to the accused, but they were not granted broad participatory rights in the proceedings. The drafters of the Rome Statute acknowledged wide-ranging interests of victims who, apart from seeking reparations, have a genuine interest in having their voices heard by expressing their views and opinions throughout legal proceedings, and validating their experiences by being part of the truth seeking process in the court of law.This commentary scrutinizes a number of early decisions in the Lubanga case that have firmly established practices in dealing with victims and were largely followed by other chambers. Although the jurisprudence has received a mixed bag of reviews in professional and academic circles, it is important to highlight the contribution of the judges to the interpretation of the victim participation framework that can be fine-tuned in forthcoming proceedings before the Court. ",
author = "Iryna Marchuk",
note = "Victim Participation Framework in the International Criminal Court",
year = "2014",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-1-78068-062-0",
volume = "39",
series = "Annotated Leading Cases of International Criminal Tribunals",
publisher = "Intersentia",
pages = "278--286",
editor = "Andr{\'e} Klip and Freeland, {Steven }",
booktitle = "Annotated Leading Cases of International Criminal Tribunals",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Commentary (Victim Participation in the International Criminal Court)

AU - Marchuk, Iryna

N1 - Victim Participation Framework in the International Criminal Court

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - Victim participation is one of the most innovative aspects introduced in the legal framework of the International Criminal Court (hereinafter – ICC), which has not featured in the practices of other international criminal courts and tribunals. The approach of the ad hoc tribunals to victims was very ‘consumer like’ because victims were solely used as witnesses to testify about the crimes attributed to the accused, but they were not granted broad participatory rights in the proceedings. The drafters of the Rome Statute acknowledged wide-ranging interests of victims who, apart from seeking reparations, have a genuine interest in having their voices heard by expressing their views and opinions throughout legal proceedings, and validating their experiences by being part of the truth seeking process in the court of law.This commentary scrutinizes a number of early decisions in the Lubanga case that have firmly established practices in dealing with victims and were largely followed by other chambers. Although the jurisprudence has received a mixed bag of reviews in professional and academic circles, it is important to highlight the contribution of the judges to the interpretation of the victim participation framework that can be fine-tuned in forthcoming proceedings before the Court.

AB - Victim participation is one of the most innovative aspects introduced in the legal framework of the International Criminal Court (hereinafter – ICC), which has not featured in the practices of other international criminal courts and tribunals. The approach of the ad hoc tribunals to victims was very ‘consumer like’ because victims were solely used as witnesses to testify about the crimes attributed to the accused, but they were not granted broad participatory rights in the proceedings. The drafters of the Rome Statute acknowledged wide-ranging interests of victims who, apart from seeking reparations, have a genuine interest in having their voices heard by expressing their views and opinions throughout legal proceedings, and validating their experiences by being part of the truth seeking process in the court of law.This commentary scrutinizes a number of early decisions in the Lubanga case that have firmly established practices in dealing with victims and were largely followed by other chambers. Although the jurisprudence has received a mixed bag of reviews in professional and academic circles, it is important to highlight the contribution of the judges to the interpretation of the victim participation framework that can be fine-tuned in forthcoming proceedings before the Court.

M3 - Comment

SN - 978-1-78068-062-0

VL - 39

T3 - Annotated Leading Cases of International Criminal Tribunals

SP - 278

EP - 286

BT - Annotated Leading Cases of International Criminal Tribunals

A2 - Klip, André

A2 - Freeland, Steven

PB - Intersentia

ER -

ID: 47654966