International Criminal Justice

Theoretical and Legal Perspectives

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Bibliografische Daten
ISBN/EAN: 9781441911018
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: xviii, 198 S.
Auflage: 1. Auflage 2010
Einband: gebundenes Buch

Beschreibung

InhaltsangabeCan Domestically Seated War Crimes Tribunals Generate Positive Externalities?: A Case Study of the Special Court for Sierra Leone Richard Culp & Christopher Warburton Divided We Stand?: American and European Perspectives in the Fight Against Transnational Terrorism M. Victoria Perez-Rios It Counts, but Only When it Does Not Matter?: Evolving Standards of Decency and the Law of Other Countries Robert Schopp Justin Time Justice: Flexibilizing Borders, Law and Human Rights Nancy Wonders Just War Claims: Historical Theory, International Policing and Modern Rhetoric ToyFung Tung Lawlessness and Legality in International Justice: The Case of Humanitarian Intervention Jill Stauffer Policing the Human: Lawfare and Humanitarianism J. Paul Narkunas Restorative Justice under the International Criminal Court Regime Dragana Radosavljevic Terrorism: The Dilemma of Response Elena Pokalova The Terrorist Threat to Civil Liberties Martin Wallenstein United Nations Counterterrorist Strategies and Human Rights: Challenges and Opportunities George Andreopoulos

Autorenportrait

George Andreopoulos is a Professor of Government and a member of the doctoral faculty of the Political Science and Criminal Justice programs at the CUNY Graduate School and University Center. He is also the Director of the Center for International Human Rights. Professor Andreopoulos studied history, law, and international relations at the Universities of Chicago and Cambridge. Before coming to CUNY, he taught for several years at Yale University, where he was the founding Associate Director of the Orville Schell Center for International Human Rights. He has written extensively on international security, international human rights, and international humanitarian law issues. Rosemary Barberet is an Associate Professor in the Sociology Department at John Jay Collegfe of Criminal Justice where she currently teaches a variety of courses in the undergraduate major in International Criminal Justice. A native of Connecticut and trained in criminology in the United States (PhD, University of Maryland, 1994), she has spent most of her academic career in Europe (Spain and England). Her publications have dealt with self-reported youth crime, violence against women, business crime, crime indicators and comparative methodology. Her presentations and guest lectures span two continents, three languages and have been delivered to public service professionals (police officers, judges and court employees, women's associations) as well as to academic colleagues. Her research interests include the use of criminal justice data and research in policymaking, crime indicators, victimization, gender and crime and cross-cultural methodology. James P. Levine is the Dean of Research and Professor of Criminal Justice at John Jay College of Criminal Justice. He is also currently serving as the Chairperson for the Department of Law, Police Science and Criminal Justice Administration. He was Dean of Graduate Studies at John Jay from 1997 to 2006. From 1993 to 1999, he served as Executive Officer of the Doctoral Program in Criminal Justice of the City University of New York located at John Jay College. He is a member of Phi Beta Kappa. He received a PhD in political science from Northwestern University, winning the Edward S. Corwin Award (from the American Political Science Association for the best dissertation in public law completed in 1968). Prior to coming to John Jay, he served on the faculties of Michigan State University, the University of Oregon, and Brooklyn College of the City University of New York. Dean Levine has published two textbooks on criminal justice (co-authored with Michael Musheno and Dennis Palumbo): Criminal Justice: A Public Policy Approach (1980) and Criminal Justice in America: Law in Action (1986). He is the co-author, with David Abbott, of Wrong Winner: The Coming Debacle in the Electoral College (1991). His most recent book is Juries and Politics (1992). He has published numerous articles on criminal justice institutions, criminal justice policy, and research methodology. His research has focused on jury behavior in recent years. Dean Levine's work has appeared in such journals as Judicature, Criminal Law Bulletin, Criminal Justice Ethics, Journal of Criminal Justice, Legal Studies Forum, Law and Social Inquiry, Crime and Delinquency, Social Science Quarterly, Criminology, Public Policy, Law and Society Review, and Polity.

Inhalt

Can Domestically Seated War Crimes Tribunals Generate Positive Externalities?: A Case Study of the Special Court for Sierra Leone Richard Culp & Christopher Warburton Divided We Stand?: American and European Perspectives in the Fight Against Transnational Terrorism M. Victoria Perez-Rios It Counts, but Only When it Does Not Matter?: Evolving Standards of Decency and the Law of Other Countries Robert Schopp Just-in Time Justice: Flexibilizing Borders, Law and Human Rights Nancy Wonders Just War Claims: Historical Theory, International Policing and Modern Rhetoric Toy-Fung Tung Lawlessness and Legality in International Justice: The Case of Humanitarian Intervention Jill Stauffer Policing the Human: Lawfare and Humanitarianism J. Paul Narkunas Restorative Justice under the International Criminal Court Regime Dragana Radosavljevic Terrorism: The Dilemma of Response Elena Pokalova The Terrorist Threat to Civil Liberties Martin Wallenstein United Nations Counterterrorist Strategies and Human Rights: Challenges and Opportunities George Andreopoulos