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Managerial justice continues apace with the recent Independent Expert Review of 2020. Yet such an exercise – managerial in its assumptions, diagnoses, and techniques – sounds a familiar tune once we observe the court’s managerial present and its macro, micro, and meso scales of managerial governance. This concluding chapter therefore asks how this institutional terrain, saturated with management thought and practices, might be navigated by those concerned about its relationship to global justice efforts. Rather than posing a series of policy prescriptions, this chapter instead suggests a professional posture or strategy of discomfort that experts and others might assume in resisting managerial justice. Drawing on Vergès’s strategy of rupture, Weber’s ethic of responsibility, and the decolonial movement, a strategy of discomfort resists the urge to look for solutions in either the complete removal or partial renovation of management. Rather, it proposes that experts admit to their politics, experience the force of such managerial politics as violence, and experience the responsibility of justice-seeking beyond efficiency savings and the strategic plan.
In 2019, ICC Pre-Trial Chamber II decided not to open an investigation into potential Taliban and US crimes in Afghanistan on the grounds that it would not be in the ‘interests of justice’. In arriving at this conclusion, the judges relied upon management concerns about organisational sustainability and the proposed use of resources to justify their position. While heavily criticised by scholars at the time, the judges’ reasoning alludes to the pervasiveness of management ideas and reasoning throughout the court, even in the realm of legal argumentation. This chapter takes the Afghanistan decision as the starting point for a discussion on management’s relationship to core argumentative dilemmas comprising the ICC legal field. Whether in framing case selection as a matter of court capacity or fashioning past obstacles to victim participation as ‘lessons learnt’, management ideas and practices enact a flight from the dilemmas and complexities of ICC-style justice by experts, deferring critique and sustaining the institutional project of global justice.
This chapter examines the context and consequences of the Registry ReVision project from the perspective of its management ideas and practices. While championed by Herman von Hebel, newly elected registrar of the court in 2013, ReVision was a long-term project of institutional transformation fostered and executed by external consultants, internal experts, judges, and staff members. While taking place in a wider context of court contention and dissent from certain quarters, ReVision told a uniquely managerial story about the court’s deficiencies and future organisational needs in ways that prioritised certain contexts, problems, and voices over others. And although its effect was to depoliticise the court, it simultaneously offered this effort as the extent and limit of the court’s own political ambitions. By surveying the actors, practices, and documentation of ReVision, this chapter offers an account of the reorganisation as a project of professional comfort.
Chapter 3 offers an account of management’s introduction to, proliferation within, and influence upon the International Criminal Court from its inception until its twentieth anniversary year. This is the first of three scales of management dealing with the macro level of large-scale organisational optimisation. Efficiency arguments featured at various points during the early drafting stage, and management concerns loomed large in Rome. The nascent management frameworks of audit and minor restructuring exercises soon paved the way for court-wide strategic planning and the austerity politics of the post-2008 Global Financial Crisis. Throughout the court’s brief lifespan, management practices such as strategic planning, auditing, and performance indicators have been invoked, deployed, and critiqued by court officials, judges, scholars, NGOs, and external consultants. That process has also witnessed the narrowing of global justice down to what is deemed institutionally palatable, rather than anything more ambitious.
Practitioners and scholars of the International Criminal Court are now bilingual: they speak the familiar language of anti-impunity, justice, and mass violence alongside the more unfamiliar but no less language of strategic planning, audit, appraisal, and optimisation. But how has it happened that such management language now finds a home in this primary institution of global justice? This introductory chapter begins to answer this question by introducing international (criminal) lawyers to management as an expert practice, before positioning the phenomenon within the wider dispositif of the International Criminal Court. The chapter further brings the study of management to international lawyers by offering four axioms of expertise that guide the book’s approach to both international law and management expertise. After briefly outlining the key arguments, the introduction provides an outline of the chapters and a note on the book’s stylistic choices.
Most ICC commentators are enthusiastic about the promise of management as a way to optimise the court’s performance. Yet few are as eager to historicise the practices they advocate. Chapter 2 seeks to read the court’s managerial present through its past deployments, journeys, and consequences for other institutional projects long predating the contemporary Rome Statute system. The chapter begins by tracing the uses of management in such institutions as the plantation, war, and the nineteenth-century factory before following them as they entered the practice of early international institutions. Beyond these spaces, a major part of management’s pre-history lies in its invocation at the United Nations after decolonisation. The chapter demonstrates that two of management’s key assumptions – regarding its lack of history and its claim to political neutrality – are only the ‘truth effects’ of protracted expert and political struggle within various institutional spaces. The most important of these for the ICC has been the United Nations, where management formed part of a counter-strategy against the democratisation efforts of newly decolonised states. Whilst purportedly neutral today, the management practices taken up at the ICC continue to bear the scars of these earlier political wins and losses.
The ICC expert, especially the court lawyer, combines their everyday international legal work with the managerial work of having their performance appraised, committing to the court’s core competencies, and assisting with audit exercises. Indeed, the very process of applying for and getting a job at the court is guided by management ideas and practices. Throughout their ‘career’, from the moment they begin to apply for an ICC vacancy until their departure from the court, the ICC expert is mediated by a range of human resource management techniques. This chapter traces that professional journey into, through, and up the court organisation and the consequences of such identity work for the professional imagination of the international criminal lawyer. By engaging with management’s principles, models, meetings, forms, and reports, the ICC expert makes court, and self-optimisation, a lodestar of global justice.