ForewordClaus KrefiNotes on ContributorsIntroductionPavel SturmaMilan LipovskyPART 1 Theoretical Issues and the Concept of Genocide1 State Responsibility and Individual Criminal Responsibility for the Crime of GenocidePavel Sturma2 Atrocity Labelling Framing the PhenomenonMark US P. BehamPART 2 Forms of Responsibility for the Crime of Genocide3 Time Yet Again for Judicial Creativity Does a Purpose-Based Approach Hinder Successful Prosecutions of Genocide Cases?Michala Chadimovd4 Attempted Genocide in International Criminal LawNikola Kurkovd KlimovdPART 3 Specially Protected Groups5 A House with Four Rooms Only? The Protected Groups under the Definition of GenocideVeronika Bilkovd6 The Prevention of Cultural Genocide and the International Protection of National MinoritiesHarald Christian Scheu7 "The Victim Is the Group Itself" The Objective and Subjective Criteria in Determining the Groups Protected against GenocideKatefina Uhlifova8 Invisible Genocide The Relevance of the 1948 Genocide Convention to the People with DisabilitiesEliska MockovaPART 4 Denial of Crimes and Current Situations9 The Stigma of Genocide and the Denial of Communist CrimesTamas Hoffmann10 The Denial of the Armenian Genocide and the Claim of the Rohingya GenocideKatarina Smigova11 The Situation in Myanmar and the Territorial Jurisdiction of the iceKristyna Pelikanova UrbanovaPART 5 Genocide Internationally and Domestically12 The Czech (Czechoslovak) Experience with the Genocide ConventionOndfej Svacek13 Universal Jurisdiction and the Crime of GenocideMilan LipovskyBibliographyIndex