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Iseghohime Daniel Ehighalua 
Future of the International Criminal Court 
Reform, Consensus, and Relations with the USA

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Cover of Iseghohime Daniel Ehighalua: Future of the International Criminal Court (ePUB)
This book presents the argument that solution-driven policy and treaty changes, if faithfully implemented, will rekindle the relevance of the International Criminal Court (ICC) in combatting and prosecuting atrocity crimes. This work examines how the International Criminal Court could be re-envisioned to perform optimally, and why such reform is urgent. It also discusses the position of the USA towards the court and explores why it has been unable to transition from marginal engagement to full spectrum support by signing and ratifying the Rome Treaty 1998. The conceptual frameworks deployed range from how the US construes its national interest to geo-political balancing and the present rudderless state of the rules order, in addition to the personal predilections of US Presidents and the Court s dysfunctional state. The objective is to show that if the ICC does not engender reforms internally, it will not survive the fissiparous tendencies innate in the presently fractured rules order. The work argues that only foundational reforms around treaty amendments along with institutional realignment of roles and responsibilities of the Court s principal officers will yet rescue it. The book will be of interest to researchers, academics and policy-makers working in the areas of International Criminal Law and International Relations.
€49.85
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Format EPUB ● Pages 264 ● ISBN 9781000893458 ● Publisher Taylor and Francis ● Published 2023 ● Downloadable 3 times ● Currency EUR ● ID 9044566 ● Copy protection Adobe DRM
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