Publication | Closed Access
A Cosmopolitan Liberal Account of International Criminal Law
24
Citations
34
References
2013
Year
Criminal CodeConstitutional LawLawCriminal LawInternational CrimesCosmopolitan Liberal AccountSocial SciencesPrivate International LawComparative Criminal LawInternational Criminal LawInternational RelationsInternational Criminal CourtsInternational LawHuman Rights LawNew FrameworkInternational Humanitarian LawPublic International LawCriminal JusticeComparative LawInternational CriminologyInternational Legal StudiesTransplant Fundamental PrinciplesInternational Criminal PracticeProminent FrameworksPolitical Science
Abstract In this article, I argue that two prominent frameworks for evaluating and developing international criminal law (ICL) can be reconciled into a new framework that absorbs the best insights of its predecessors. We cannot simply transplant fundamental principles from national legal systems, because they may be inapposite in the unusual contexts faced by ICL. However, this novelty does not mean that we are free to simply abandon culpability, legality, and our basic underlying commitment to the individual. Instead we must explore what that deontic commitment might entail in these new contexts. My primary aim is to show the possibility of bridging the apparent normative impasse. I also briefly sketch out the proposed framework, and suggest that it can generate new questions for current controversies in ICL. As an interesting by-product, the examination of ‘abnormal’ criminal law can raise new questions for general criminal-law theory, by exposing subtleties and parameters that we might not have noticed in a study of ‘normal’ contexts.
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