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Contents

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 December 2015

Christian De Vos
Affiliation:
Open Society Justice Initiative
Sara Kendall
Affiliation:
University of Kent, Canterbury
Carsten Stahn
Affiliation:
Universiteit Leiden
Type
Chapter
Information
Contested Justice
The Politics and Practice of International Criminal Court Interventions
, pp. v - vii
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2015
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NC
This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/cclicenses/

Contents

  1. List of contributors

  2. Foreword by Ruti G. Teitel

  3. Acknowledgements

  4. Citing this work

  5. Introduction

    Christian M. De Vos, Sara Kendall and Carsten Stahn

  6. Part ILaw’s shape and place

    1. 1In whose name? The ICC and the search for constituency

      Frédéric Mégret

    2. 2Justice civilisatrice? The ICC, post-colonial theory, and faces of ‘the local’

      Carsten Stahn

    3. 3The global as local: the limits and possibilities of integrating international and transitional justice

      David S. Koller

    4. 4Bespoke transitional justice at the International Criminal Court

      Jaya Ramji-Nogales

    5. 5A synthesis of community-based justice and complementarity

      Michael A. Newton

  7. Part IIReception and contestation

    1. 6In the shadow of Kwoyelo’s trial: the ICC and complementarity in Uganda

      Stephen Oola

    2. 7A story of missed opportunities: the role of the International Criminal Court in the Democratic Republic of Congo

      Pascal Kalume Kambale

    3. 8The justice vanguard: the role of civil society in seeking accountability for Kenya’s post-election violence

      Njonjo Mue and Judy Gitau

    4. 9‘They told us we would be part of history’: reflections on the civil society intermediary experience in the Great Lakes region

      Déirdre Clancy

  8. Part IIIPractices of inclusion and exclusion

    1. 10Challenges and limitations of outreach: from the ICTY to the ICC

      Matias Hellman

    2. 11‘We ask for justice, you give us law’: the rule of law, economic markets and the reconfiguration of victimhood

      Kamari Maxine Clarke

    3. 12Refracted justice: the imagined victim and the International Criminal Court

      Laurel E. Fletcher

    4. 13Reparations and the politics of recognition

      Peter J. Dixon

    5. 14Beyond the restorative turn: the limits of legal humanitarianism

      Sara Kendall

  9. Part IVPolitics and legal pluralism

    1. 15All roads lead to Rome: implementation and domestic politics in Kenya and Uganda

      Christian M. De Vos

    2. 16Applying and ‘misapplying’ the Rome Statute in the Democratic Republic of Congo

      Patryk I. Labuda

    3. 17Beyond the ‘shadow’ of the ICC: struggles over control of the conflict narrative in Colombia

      Jennifer Easterday

    4. 18Between justice and politics: the ICC’s intervention in Libya

      Mark Kersten

    5. 19Peace making, justice and the ICC

      Juan E. Méndez and Jeremy Kelley

  10. Index

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