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International criminal law

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1 Review
Oxford University Press, Incorporated, 2003 - Law - 472 pages
This new book by Cassese provides a clear and concise account of the principles governing international crimes and an outline of international criminal trials. Adopting a combination of the classic common law and more theoretical approaches to the subject, it expounds the fundamentals of both substantive and procedural international criminal law, providing a theoretical framework to all the rules, principles, concepts, and legal constructs key to the subject. It also offers extensive treatment of the most significant traditional and novel cases in English, as well as unique English translations of a selection of relevant judgments in Dutch, French, German, Italian, and Spanish, demonstrating the historical and human dimensions of such cases, and providing effective illustration of the practical problems encountered by criminal courts.

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Review: International Criminal Law

User Review - Goodreads

Law casebooks are usually deadly dull reading. The case method leaches the life out of events and histories and separates cases from context in the name of looking at juridical reasoning. Nonethless ...

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About the author (2003)


Antonio Cassese is Professor of International Law at the University of Florence, and former President of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia

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