by Harris Institute | Mar 6, 2015 | International Criminal Law, Refugee and Asylum Law, Uncategorized
By: Madaline George Last week, U.S. immigration officials announced plans to deport 150 Bosnians Serbs whom they believe took part in war crimes and ethnic cleansing during the conflict in the former Yugoslavia; a total of 300 people are suspected of having...
by Harris Institute | Feb 4, 2015 | International Criminal Law, The International Criminal Court
By: Eleanor Gourley February 4, 2015 The afternoon of Monday January 26th, 2015, found the International Criminal Court (ICC) buzzing with visitors and journalists. The viewing gallery of Pre-Trial Chamber II was full as Dominic Ongwen appeared before the Single...
by Harris Institute | Jan 26, 2015 | Crimes Against Humanity Initiative, International Criminal Law
By: Leila Nadya Sadat, January 26, 2015 (Originally posted on International Criminal Justice Toady, an ABA-ICC Project) Although the international community has made significant progress with respect to the prevention and prosecution of international atrocity...
by Harris Institute | Jan 21, 2015 | International Criminal Law, The International Criminal Court, Uncategorized
By: Jarrod Jolly, January 2015 On 1 December 2014, the Appeals Chamber of the International Criminal Court (ICC) confirmed the verdict and sentence against Thomas Lubanga Dyilo (Lubanga), who was convicted in March 2012 of committing war crimes as a ‘co-perpetrator’....
by Harris Institute | Oct 27, 2014 | Global Public Interest Law Internships, Human Rights, International Criminal Law
By: Jim Ransdell Jim Ransdell, 3L, interned at Legal Resources Centre in Accra, Ghana during the Summer of 2014 as part of Washington University School of Law’s Global Public Interest Law Internships. This is the third in a series of posts by Jim where he shares his...