Cosmopolitanism and the Development of the International Criminal Court
eBook - PDF

Cosmopolitanism and the Development of the International Criminal Court

Non-Governmental Organizations’ Advocacy and Transnational Human Rights

  1. 183 pages
  2. English
  3. PDF
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - PDF

Cosmopolitanism and the Development of the International Criminal Court

Non-Governmental Organizations’ Advocacy and Transnational Human Rights

About this book

Cosmopolitanism and the Development of the International Criminal Court analyzes a set of prominent and competing discourses that emerged in the context of the development and establishment of the International Criminal Court (ICC). The ICC is the first permanent juridical body designed to prosecute individuals who commit offences including war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide. Drawing on scholarship on public memory and human rights, the book argues that international law and the international human rights system play a key role for the development of transnational memory discourses and transnational or cosmopolitan subjectivities. Despite the International Criminal Court being recognized as a landmark development in global cooperation, an examination of key events in the development of the court shows how some state and nonstate actors advance calls for cosmopolitanism while others resist cosmopolitanism to bolster nation-state sovereignty.

Drawing on the establishment of the International Criminal Court as a case study, the book examines several events that continue to shape national and international public discourse. The book examines debates that occurred during the drafting process of the international treaty at the United Nations and that led to the groundbreaking inclusion of provisions on gender and sexual violence in the Rome Statute of the ICC in 1998. The analysis discusses the tension between feminist advocates' rhetoric and the discourse of anti–women's rights actors involved in the treaty-making process who resisted such inclusions in international criminal law. The book analyzes other key events related to the establishment of the ICC that invoke tensions between competing demands of cosmopolitanism and national sovereignty, including advocacy campaigns by nongovernmental organizations working to drum up public support of the institution of the International Criminal Court and the debates surrounding the unprecedented act of the United States "unsigning" an international treaty. In sum, this examination of the rhetoric of state and nonstate actors attempting to shape the court according to their visions of global community shows how discourses about international criminal law and human rights are employed not only to advance cosmopolitanism but also to strengthen nationalist discourses.

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Yes, you can access Cosmopolitanism and the Development of the International Criminal Court by Jennifer Biedendorf in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Law & Civil Rights in Law. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Table of contents

  1. Contents
  2. Acknowledgments
  3. 1 Memory Beyond Borders?
  4. 2 The International Criminal Court
  5. 3 The “Distinctly American Internationalism”
  6. 4 Remaking the ICC for the United States
  7. 5 Gender, Sexual Violence, and International Community
  8. 6 Sovereignty/Cosmopolitanism Revisited
  9. Bibliography
  10. Index
  11. About the Author