ABSTRACT

This book provides an essential and critical overview of the most significant issues concerning the domestication of international criminal law, in particular with regard to the implementation of the ICC Statute. It discusses the most recent proposals for reform of the German Code of Crimes under International Law, the "Völkerstrafgesetzbuch", 20 years after its entering into force and introduces the project for an Italian code of international crimes drafted by the Committee of experts established in 2022 by the Ministry of Justice.

Following the adoption of the ICC Statute, many States, including Germany with the "Völkerstrafgesetzbuch", introduced specific legislation to incorporate international criminal law into their domestic legal systems and a considerable number of them have been investigating and prosecuting war crimes, crimes against humanity, genocide, and even aggression ever since. Twenty-five years later, however, the process is not completed as other countries, like Italy, are still working on adopting provisions on international crimes. This book opens with a broad overview of the different approaches of the domestication of international criminal law, with a specific focus on the German and the Italian systems. After an assessment of the prerequisites for the domestic implementation of international criminal law, also from a constitutional law perspective, each chapter offers an in-depth analysis of a specific issue, such as: the definition of international crimes (genocide and crimes against humanity, war crimes and aggression); the applicability of and exceptions to the general principles of domestic criminal law; the regulation of individual criminal responsibility; sanctions and sentencing; as well as procedural aspects related to immunities, jurisdiction and prosecutorial discretion. The strong academic perspective of many authors is complemented by an equally strong practitioner perspective of the others, provided by legal scholars in the highest positions in international and national judicial institutions, resulting in a well-informed and critical appraisal of the most recent developments overall in the international criminal justice system.

Domesticating International Criminal Law will be of great interest to legal scholars and students, as well as practitioners with an interest in comparative and international law, international criminal law and international relations.

part I|8 pages

Introduction

chapter 1.1|6 pages

Obligations, Options and Obstacles

Implementing the Rome Statute Revisited

part II|54 pages

Italian Perspectives on the Domestic Implementation of International Criminal Law

chapter 2.1|10 pages

The Domestic Codification of International Crimes

The Private Initiative “Cariplo Project”

chapter 2.2|10 pages

Previous Italian legislative drafts

chapter 2.3|14 pages

Implementation of substantive rules of international criminal law in Italy

Between international obligations and constitutional law principles

chapter 2.5|10 pages

The way forward

An overview on the draft “Palazzo-Pocar” of 2022

part III|72 pages

The adoption of domestic laws on international criminal justice

chapter 3.1|25 pages

Domestic and international criminal justice

Challenges ahead *

chapter 3.2|12 pages

Between international solidarity and “no safe haven”

The German Völkerstrafgesetzbuch 20 years on

chapter 3.4|12 pages

Domesticating the ICC Statute

A global perspective

part IV|58 pages

Defining International Crimes in the Domestic Legislation

chapter 4.2|14 pages

The Italian Legislation on War Crimes

Obligations to Implement and the Principle of Legality

part V|44 pages

Individual criminal responsibility, sanctions and sentencing in the domestic legislation

part VI|36 pages

Immunities, Jurisdiction and Prosecutorial Discretion

chapter 6.2|10 pages

The rejection of immunities for international crimes

A solution for the survival of the International Criminal Justice Project?

chapter 6.3|16 pages

Justice of the Powerful

Abusing Prosecutorial Discretion in the Punishment of International Crimes?