Justice Update – 30 years Since ICTR Founded
It was 30 years ago that the Rwanda Tribunal was established after the genocide. What were the issues and how is it seen now?
It was 30 years ago that the Rwanda Tribunal was established after the genocide. What were the issues and how is it seen now?
Stephanie and Janet sit down with Beth van Schaak to talk about the role of the United States in international criminal justice
Kjell Anderson talks to Stephanie and Janet about Dominic Ongwen and other perpetrators of war crimes and genocide
IHL expert Janina Dill discusses the myths and confusion around the rules of war.
Alette Smeulers talk about the various types of perpetrators and how ordinary citizens can commit mass atrocities.
We discuss how to prove and prosecute alleged war crimes committed during military campaigns in a court of law.
What next for Felicien Kabuga, unfit to stand trial for the Rwandan genocide, but possibly facing an alternative procedure never before heard of in international criminal tribunals.
The final Hague trial dealing the wars in the former Yugoslavia.
Former Kosovo president is on trial in The Hague – Janet and Stephanie outline the case
Kate Gibson and Barbora Hola explain why eight men acquitted by the ICTR are stuck in Niger and why international justice is failing them
Beth van Schaack on renewed US support to the ICC, crime of aggression in Ukraine and possible accountability in Liberia, Ethiopia, El Salvador
Judge Alphons Orie on international humanitarian law as it meets international criminal tribunals
How to make sure that local prosecutors are equipped to tackle atrocity crimes? Maxine Marcus, Kathy Roberts and Drita Hajdari explain.
What the verdict on former Serbian Secret Service officials Stanišić and Simatović can tell us about the future of prosecution of war crimes in Serbia.
What’s the ICC’s state of health as the new prosecutor takes over? Diane Orentlicher and Dire Tladi discuss the big problems facing the court.
The Srebrenica massacre is the subject of a highly acclaimed movie Quo vadis, Aida?. We discuss with Alma Mustafić and Emir Suljagić, who were both there, how such a film helps define the image we have of a mass atrocity.
Karim Khan has been elected prosecutor of the ICC. What does the international justice community make of him?
It’s the biggest job in international justice: prosecutor of the ICC. Who will the next one be? Janet and Stephanie talk to the candidate Fergal Gaynor
Private investigators collected evidence of atrocity crimes in places like Syria. Nerma Jelacic of CIJA explains what’s happening to that evidence now.
On the eve of the 25th anniversary of the Srebrenica genocide Janet and Stephanie sit down with Iva Vukusic, Jennifer Trahan and Hikmet Karcic to talk the legacy of the Yugoslavia tribunal and revisionism in Bosnia
Sabrina Mahtani has been monitoring worldwide what’s been happening to prisoners. And, despite the obvious dangers they face in confined spaces, she sees the positive developments being driven by this Covid-19 crisis.
It’s alive! We finally got around to talking all things Kosovo court with Maj Grasten from Copenhagen Business School
How can you prosecute military and civilian leaders for atrocity crimes? Leeds University professor Elies van Sliedregt helps unravel ‘modes of liability’ for genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity at international criminal tribunals
The Haircuts celebrate this holiday season with self-indulgence and a dose of self-mockery. Plus intern Hannah gives some super recommendations on what to watch and listen to.
For our delve into paramilitaries and the former Yugoslavia, Iva and her research assistant Joy, took us on a walk in a cemetery in The Hague.
We sit down with criminologist Barbora Hola to talk about perpetrators and life after sentencing at international courts