Foreign Policy Blogs

Tag Archives: I.C.C.

War Crimes Expansion Led By San Marino

War Crimes Expansion Led By San Marino

  San Marino became the first nation to ratify an amendment proposed at the 2010 Kampala Review Conference of the Rome Statute, which governs the International Criminal Court. San Marino deposited its ratification of the amendment to Article 8 at U.N. Headquarters today becoming the first nation to ratify the amendment classifying the use of […]

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I.C.C. Precedent and Involvement in the Arab Spring

I.C.C. Precedent and Involvement in the Arab Spring

Governments have attacked and killed civilian protesters across the Middle East. These attacks have resulted in action by the International Criminal Court and international military forces against Libya but inaction against similar atrocities in other Middle Eastern states. This discrepancy in response by the I.C.C., international community, and the U.S., have drawn cries of hypocrisy. […]

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Libya Is Real Progress By And For The International Criminal Court When Compared To All Previous Formal I.C.C. Investigations

Libya Is Real Progress By And For The International Criminal Court When Compared To All Previous Formal I.C.C. Investigations

Last week Libya became the subject of official investigation by the International Criminal Court, the sixth since the court’s inception in 2002. There are three ways in which an investigation can be initiated by the Office of The Prosecutor; referral of a situation by a state party of the Rome Statute, referral from the U.N. […]

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