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4 - The genesis of complementarity

from PART II - Origin and genesis of complementarity

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2014

Carsten Stahn
Affiliation:
Universiteit Leiden
Mohamed M. El Zeidy
Affiliation:
International Criminal Court
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Summary

[A]n effect of tremendously disparate complementaries which strengthen each other by their juxtaposition.

(Vincent van Gogh describing the utility of employing the concept of complementarity of colours in art in his famous painting ‘Irises’, 1890.)

Abstract

This chapter examines the genesis of the concept of complementarity. It argues that, unlike the common perception among many scholars, complementarity is not a novel concept attributed to the sole work of the International Law Commission or any subsequent effort. Rather, the concept existed a long time before the International Law Commission was seized of its mandate to prepare a draft statute establishing an international criminal court. The parameters and the legal conditions that organized the concept's operation developed over a period of seventy-nine years starting from 1919 and ending with the adoption of the Rome Statute in 1998. The elaboration of these legal criteria throughout this lengthy period led to the emergence of different models of complementarity, one of which is the 1998 Rome Statute's model. Every model was introduced during a certain period for quite different, but often overlapping philosophical and legal reasons. The common premise that underlined these complementarity models was that, irrespective of the reasons, an international criminal jurisdiction may do that which the national criminal jurisdiction was not in a position to do.

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Chapter
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The International Criminal Court and Complementarity
From Theory to Practice
, pp. 71 - 141
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2011

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References

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This interpretation also finds support in a statement made by a member of the ILC in commenting on the 1993 draft prepared by the 1993 working group on the basis of which the jurisdictional clauses of the 1994 draft were prepared: ‘It should not be forgotten that the court's jurisdiction was not only a conferred, but also a concurrent, jurisdiction…it did not mean that a case must automatically be judged by the court. A case that might be under the jurisdiction of the international criminal court could well remain in the national courts. If a State decided to put a case before the international criminal court, by so doing it renounced the jurisdiction of the national courts’. See (1994) I YILC 29
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