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Open Access Publications from the University of California

International Law Workshop

INSTRUCTOR: Andrew Guzman and John Yoo
LOCATION: Dean's Seminar Room
TIME: Thursday, 4:00 - 6:00 pm

We are pleased to announce the International Law Workshop series for Fall 2004. Talks are held on Thursday afternoons from 4:00-6:00pm in the Dean's Seminar Room. At each of the workshops an invited speaker presents a work in progress followed by a discussion with faculty and students. All are invited to attend. Copies of the papers are posted below.

Cover page of Guilty Associations:  Joint Criminal Enerprise, Command Responsibility and the Development of International Criminal Law

Guilty Associations: Joint Criminal Enerprise, Command Responsibility and the Development of International Criminal Law

(2004)

Contemporary international criminal law is largely concerned with holding individual defendants responsible for mass atrocities. Because the crimes usually involve the concerted efforts of many individuals, allocating responsibility among those individuals is of critical importance. This Article examines two liability doctrines – joint criminal enterprise and command responsibility – that play a central role in that allocation of guilt in international criminal tribunals. The Article posits a general framework for understanding the development of international criminal law, as an outgrowth of three legal traditions: domestic criminal law, international human rights law, and transitional justice. We explore the application of that framework to the joint criminal enterprise and command responsibility doctrines and argue that viewing joint criminal enterprise and command responsibility through the lens of our framework shows the need for certain doctrinal reforms. Finally, we discuss the application of liability doctrines developed in the context of inter-national criminal tribunals to prosecutions for international or transnational crimes in other fo-rums, such as domestic military tribunal prosecutions of terrorists, that do not share the same roots as international criminal law.

Cover page of Is the International Court of Justice Politically Biased?

Is the International Court of Justice Politically Biased?

(2004)

The International Court of Justice has jurisdiction over disputes between nations, and has decided dozens of cases since it began operations in 1946. Its academic defenders argue that the ICJ decides cases impartially and confers legitimacy on the international legal system. Its critics – mostly outside the academy – argue that the members of the ICJ vote the interests of the states that appoint them. Prior empirical scholarship is ambiguous. We test the charge of political bias using statistical methods. We find strong evidence that (1) judges favor the state that appoints them; (2) judges favor states whose wealth level is close to that of the judges’ own state; and (3) judges favor states whose political system is similar to that of the judges’ own state. We find weak evidence that judges are influenced by regional and military alignments.