City Libraries, City of Gold Coast

Taking economic, social and cultural rights seriously in international criminal law, Evelyne Schmid

Label
Taking economic, social and cultural rights seriously in international criminal law, Evelyne Schmid
Language
eng
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Taking economic, social and cultural rights seriously in international criminal law
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Responsibility statement
Evelyne Schmid
Series statement
Cambridge studies in international and comparative law, 117
Summary
Is the neglect of economic, social and cultural abuses in international criminal law a problem of positive international law or the result of choices made by lawyers involved in mechanisms such as criminal prosecutions or truth commissions? Evelyne Schmid explores this question via an assessment of the relationship between violations of economic, social and cultural rights and international crimes. Based on a thorough examination of the elements of international crimes, she demonstrates how a situation can simultaneously be described as a violation of economic, social and cultural rights and as an international crime. Against the background of the emerging debates on selectivity in international criminal law and the role of socio-economic and cultural abuses in transitional justice, she argues that international crimes overlapping with violations of economic, social and cultural rights deserve to be taken seriously, for much the same reasons as other international crimes
Table Of Contents
Machine generated contents note: 1. Introduction; 2. Rethinking hierarchies of human rights in international criminal law; 3. Relating international crimes to ESCR violations; 4. Crimes against humanity revisited: from Nuremberg to Zimbabwe; 5. Four groups of war crimes and the forgotten trial of Gauleiter Greiser; 6. Genocide and the battles Raphael Lemkin did not lose; 7. Torture, slavery and other crimes overlapping with ESCR violations; 8. Corollaries of qualifying ESCR violations as international crimes; 9. Conclusions
resource.variantTitle
Taking Economic, Social & Cultural Rights Seriously in International Criminal Law
Classification
Content

Incoming Resources