Individual Responsibility in International Law for Serious Human Rights Violations

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BRILL, 27 sept. 2021 - 252 pagini
What rules of international law make the individual, even a Head of State, responsible for perpetrating serious human rights violations, such as war crimes, torture or genocide? This question is becoming more critical in our increasingly interdependent world, and the recent invasion of Kuwait and the brutalization of its people by Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein has heated up the debate even further.
The author argues that a new rule of international law stipulating individual responsibility for all serious human rights violations is currently emerging. To show how this is coming about, he explores relevant norms in classic laws of war, international humanitarian law and modern international human rights law and surveys patterns in their implementation. He then takes account of codification efforts of the International Law Commission, the changing position of the individual in international law, and other important developments in the context of general international law as an evolving system.

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Chapter I Introduction
1
Chapter II Individual Responsibility in Positive Laws of War
15
Chapter Ill Individual Responsibility in International Human Rights Law
65
Chapter IV Patterns of Implementation
99
Chapter V Codification of International Responsibility
123
Chapter VI The Position of the Individual in International Law
139
Chapter VII Emergence of a General Rule of Individual Responsibility for Serious Human Rights Violations
157
Draft Code of Crimes against the Peace and Security of Mankind
169
Bibliography
207
Index
223
International Studies in Human Rights
229
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