Head of state immunity under the Malabo Protocol triumph of impunity over accountability?
AU flirtations with impunity? : an Introduction and overview -- A retrospective on the road travelled towards the African Court of Justice and Human and Peoples' Rights -- The origins and evolution of the doctrine of head of state immunity -- A jus cogens human rights exception to immunity : f...
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Format: | UnknownFormat |
Sprache: | eng |
Veröffentlicht: |
Leiden, Boston
Brill Nijhoff
2021
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Schriftenreihe: | Developments in international law
volume 76 |
Schlagworte: |
Protocol on Amendments to the Protocol on the Statute of the African Court of Justice and Human Rights
> Immunities of foreign states
> Heads of state
> Legal status, laws, etc
> African Court of Justice and Human Rights
> Staatsoberhaupt
> Immunität
> Internationales Strafrecht
> Internationaler Strafgerichtshof
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Zusammenfassung: | AU flirtations with impunity? : an Introduction and overview -- A retrospective on the road travelled towards the African Court of Justice and Human and Peoples' Rights -- The origins and evolution of the doctrine of head of state immunity -- A jus cogens human rights exception to immunity : fact, fiction or wishful thinking? -- Immunity before international courts and Article 46A Bis of the Malabo Protocol : deconstructing the Immunity Clause and assessing Its application and coherence with international criminal law -- The AU and International criminal justice : genuine commitment or sleight of hand? -- Conclusions : triumph of impunity over accountability? "In 'Head of State Immunity under the Malabo Protocol: Triumph of Impunity over Accountability?', Kobina Egyir Daniel engages the subject of Head of State Immunity in international law against the backdrop of the African Union (AU)'s decision to create a Court with international criminal jurisdiction before which "Heads of State" or persons "entitled to act in such capacity" will have immunity during incumbency. The AU asserts - in justification - not only that it is standing up for itself against "neo-colonialist imperialist forces", which have perverted international criminal justice and target African States through the International Criminal Court (ICC), but also that it is preserving the very soul of international criminal justice as well as customary international law on immunities. Beyond the analysis to determine whether the immunity that the AU's Malabo Protocol of 2014 confers represents a retrogression in international law norms that seek accountability for jus cogens crimes, Daniel provides valuable insights into the status-inspired dialectics and self-serving hero-villain polemics that fuel contestations of right between the AU and the ICC, and the worldviews that respectively seek to overturn/preserve the asymmetry of the international legal order. Through a review of legal history, case law from national and international tribunals, state practice and academic expositions, the book examines the evolution and practice of Head of State immunity as well as recent trends in the practice of the doctrine in light of the countervailing push to establish exceptions to immunity in order to ensure accountability under international human rights and international criminal law"--Back cover |
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Beschreibung: | Includes bibliographical references (pages 435-487) and index |
Beschreibung: | XIX, 497 Seiten 25 cm |
ISBN: | 9789004466074 978-90-04-46607-4 900446607X 90-04-46607-X |