ABSTRACT

The post-World War Two period has witnessed numerous armed conflicts characterized by extensive violations of relevant obligatory international norms. Responding to these events, the United Nations General Assembly created a per­manent international court in 2003, with jurisdiction over selected international crimes. The International Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia was a precursor to this permanent court. It was established for the purpose of "prosecuting persons responsible for serious violations of international humanitarian law committed in the territory of the former Yugoslavia." As a precedent for what we may expect in the future, it deserves special attention from a historical, politi­cal, and especially an international law point of view.The Prosecution of International Crimes comprehensively examines the creation, mandate, and challenges of the Inter­national Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia. Derived from a special issue of Criminal Law Forum: An International Journal, a peer-review journal dedicated to the advance­ment of criminal law theory, practice, and reform through­out the world, it is now available in paperback.

part I|58 pages

Introductory Remarks

chapter |14 pages

Introduction*

chapter 1|12 pages

International Criminal Prosecution

The Precedent of Nuremberg Confirmed*

chapter 2|30 pages

Toward International Criminal Justice*

part II|64 pages

Fart-Finding

chapter 3|62 pages

The Commission of Experts Established pursuant to Security Council Resolution 780

Investigating Violations of International Humanitarian Law in the Former Yugoslavia*