Chapter 1. Introduction -- Chapter 2. Approaches to the History-Writing Function in International Criminal Adjudication -- Chapter 3. The Individual-Centred Lens -- Chapter 4. The Crime-Driven Lens -- Chapter 5. The Law-Affirming Lens -- Chapter 6. The Distinctive Approaches Of History And Law -- Chapter 7. Aiming Towards Responsible History in International Criminal Adjudication -- Chapter 8. Conclusion.
Summary:
This book argues for a more moderate approach to history-writing in international criminal adjudication by articulating the elements of a ?responsible history? normative framework. The question of whether international criminal courts and tribunals (ICTs) ought to write historical narratives has gained renewed relevance in the context of the recent turn to history in international criminal law, the growing attention to the historical legacies of the ad hoc Tribunals and the minimal attention paid to historical context in the first judgment of the International Criminal Court.
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