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Foreword xi

Acknowledgements xiii

Introduction xv

Part I

Causes and Prevention of Conflict

1 The Causes and Prevention of Violent Conflict 3

Kevin P Clements

2 Policing after Conflict: Peace-Building and the Responsibility to Protect 21

Andrew Goldsmith

3 The Ethnic Conflict in Solomon Islands 49

Chief Justice Albert Palmer

4 Collective Identity and the Construction of Political Markets in Mrica 67

Christophe Dongmo

5 Rethinking Nationality in International Humanitarian Law 89

Kim Rubenstein

6 The Role of International Courts and Tribunals in Relation to Armed Conflict 105

Caroline Foster

7 Human Rights Commissions and Religious Conflict in the

Asia- Pacific Region 145

Carolyn Evans

Part II

Conflict Resolution and Peace-Building

8 The Role of the United Nations in Conflict Resolution and Peace-building in Timor- Leste 165

His Excellency Sukehiro Hasegawa

9 Lessons Learned Investigating the Well-being of Children Affected by Armed Conflict 193

Colin MacMullin

10 Civil War in Cote d'Ivoire: Another Perspective on the Economy and the Political Order in Africa 209

Christophe Dongmo

11 Some Methodological Issues with Reconstructing Justice in Post-Conflict Situations (Training Judges in Afghanistan, Congo and Timor Leste) 231

Gilles BIanchi

II A Right to Family Life? Tracing Fractured Family Identities Drawing upon Law, Human Rights and Biology 243

Barbara Ann Hocking and Michele Harvey-BlankenshiP

13 Justice in the Aftermath of Mass Crimes:International Law and Peace building 261

Vliendy Lambourne

Part III

International Criminal Law, Humanitarian Law and State Responsibility

14 Take Heart - International Law Comes, Ever Comes 283

1he Hon Justice Michael Kirby

15 International Cri~inal Law, Humanitarian Law and the Responsibility of States for Choice of Forum and Effective Enforcement 299

Her Excellency Loulse Arbour

16 Challenges for the International Criminal Court: Terrorism, Immunity Agreements and National Trials 315

Gillian Triggs

17 The Sexual Violence Jurisprudence of The International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia and the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda: The Silence Has Been Broken but There's Still a Lot to Shout About 331

Carrie McDougall

18 Political Constraints upon the International Criminal Court 347

Roderic Pitty

19 Redressing the Wrongs of The International Criminal Justice System 367

Stuart Beresford

20 The War on Terror: Self-defence or Aggression? 393

Alex Conte

21 When the Law Breaker Becomes the Law Maker 413

Susan Anderson

22 What Price Justice? Prosecuting Crimes Post-Conflict 437

Geoff Gilbert

23 Strengthening Enforcement of International Criminal Law 459

Grant Niemann

24 Redressing Partial Justice - A Possible Role for Civil Society 475

Ustinia Dolgopol

25 Could Systematic Sexual Violence against Women during War Time Have Been Prevented? - Lessons from the Japanese Case of "Comfort Women" 499

Etsuro Totsuka

Part IV

The Role of the UN, Humanitarian Organisations and Peacekeepers in Post Conflict Situations 515

26 The Role of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees 517

Susan Harris Rimmer

27 Peacekeepers in Post-Conflict Situations - Upholding the Rule of Law 529

David Letts

28 The Role of Non-State Actors in International Conflict: Legal Identity, Delinquency and Political Representation 547

Christopher Harding

29 What Crisis at the United Nations? 571

Stephen Bouwhuis

30 The Role, Rights and Responsibilities ofUNHCR in Situations of

Acute Crisis 585

Geoff Gilbert

31 International Law and the Concept of Human Security 599

Barbara von Tigerstrom

List of Contributors 617

Index 623

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출판사 책소개

알라딘제공
The papers in this collection bring together a wide and diverse range of viewpoints to consider how the catastrophic consequences of deadly armed conflict can be addressed.
Commentators are drawn from the United Nations and its agencies, key non- governmental organisations, world-class academic circles, senior members of government, leading human rights lawyers and judges with experience in international criminal law. These experts address deadly conflict in a comprehensive fashion covering all its stages: the causes and prevention of conflict; conflict resolution and peace-building; international criminal law and international humanitarian law and the role of the United Nations, humanitarian organisations and peacekeepers in post conflict situations.
This collection is for those with an existing interest and expertise in international law, international relations, peace studies and criminal justice as well as for those who wish to become conversant with emerging developments in these fields.