ABSTRACT

This collection identifies and discusses problems and opportunities for the theory and practice of international criminal justice.

The International Criminal Court and project of prosecuting international atrocity crimes have faced multiple challenges and critiques. In recent times, these have included changes in technology, the conduct of armed conflict, the environment, and geopolitics. The mostly emerging contributors to this collection draw on diverse socio-legal research frameworks to discuss proposals for the futures of international criminal justice. These include addressing accountability gaps and under-examined or emerging areas of criminality at, but also beyond, the International Criminal Court, especially related to technology and the environment. The book discusses the tensions between universalism and localisation, as well as the regionalisation of international criminal justice and how these approaches might adapt to dynamic organisational, political and social structures, at the ICC and beyond.

The book will be of interest to students, researchers and academics. It will also be a useful resource for civil society representatives including justice advocates, diplomats and other government officials and policy-makers.

chapter 1|22 pages

Introduction

The futures of international criminal justice

part |75 pages

Futures of responsibility

chapter 8|21 pages

Testing knowledge

Weapons reviews of autonomous weapons systems and the international criminal trial

chapter 10|20 pages

Future-proofing international criminal law

Complexity theory perspectives on collective entity accountability

chapter 11|11 pages

Postscript

International criminal justice futures