Publication | Closed Access
The Pitfalls of Universal Jurisdiction
159
Citations
0
References
2001
Year
LawUniversal JurisdictionCriminal LawInternational CrimesTechnology LawInternational CourtPrivate International LawSocial SciencesJurisdictional LawInternational Criminal LawUnprecedented MovementConflict Of LawCrime Against HumanityInternational Criminal CourtsInternational LawHuman Rights LawPublic International LawTransitional JusticeJudicial ProceduresInternational Criminal PracticeJusticePolitical ScienceGlobal Justice
Universal jurisdiction seeks to hold perpetrators of heinous crimes accountable beyond national borders, but its rapid rise has outpaced systematic debate and risks replacing state tyranny with judicial overreach. The study outlines two mechanisms: domestic prosecutors using extradition to bring offenders into national courts, and an international criminal approach that applies universal standards.
In less than a decade, an unprecedented movement has emerged to submit international politics to judicial procedures. It has spread with extraordinary speed and has not been subjected to systematic debate, partly because of the intimidating passion of its advocates. To be sure, human rights violations, war crimes, genocide, and torture have so disgraced the modern age and in such a variety of places that the effort to interpose legal norms to prevent or punish such outrages does credit to its advocates. The danger lies in pushing the effort to extremes that risk substituting the tyranny of judges for that of governments; historically, the dictatorship of the virtuous has often led to inquisitions and even witch-hunts. The doctrine of universal jurisdiction asserts that some crimes are so heinous that their perpetrators should not escape justice by invoking doctrines of sovereign immunity or the sacrosanct nature of national frontiers. Two specific approaches to achieve this goal have emerged recently. The first seeks to apply the procedures of domestic criminal justice to violations of universal standards, some of which are embodied in United Nations conventions, by authorizing national prosecutors to bring offenders into their jurisdictions through extradition from third countries. The second approach is the International Criminal