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Journal ArticleDOI

The Right to Reparation in International Law for Victims of Armed Conflict

Johanna Herman
- 07 Sep 2015 - 
- Vol. 33, Iss: 2, pp 190-192
TLDR
Evans as discussed by the authors presents a clear and detailed overview of the rights of victims of armed conflict to receive reparation, and her book recommended to any reader who wishes to study this evolving area of law.
Abstract
Evans presents a clear and detailed overview of the rights of victims of armed conflict to receive reparation, and her book recommended to any reader who wishes to study this evolving area of law

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Rebuilding community resilience in a post-war context: developing insight and recommendations - a qualitative study in Northern Sri Lanka

TL;DR: In view of the widespread trauma at the individual, family and collective levels, community based programmes to increase local awareness, knowledge and skills to deal with common mental health and psychosocial issues are recommended to rebuild family and community agency and resilience.
Journal ArticleDOI

Addressing collective trauma: conceptualisations and interventions

Daya Somasundaram
- 01 Dec 2014 - 
TL;DR: It is advocated that post disaster relief, rehabilitation and development programmes need to address the problem of collective trauma, particularly using integrated holistic approaches.
DissertationDOI

The right to justice for victims of human rights crimes

Abstract: The past three decades have seen increasing concern in the international community for the need to more effectively ‘do justice’ for victims of mass atrocities. At the same time, there is a growing recognition that such justice includes, together with the need to ensure that appropriate reparation is provided to victims, the criminal accountability of those responsible for the most serious crimes. This thesis argues that there is an intrinsic relationship between these two emerging values. In particular, it demonstrates that a right to justice, understood as the right to the determination of the individual criminal responsibility of wrongdoers, is emerging under international law as an imperative remedy for victims of gross human rights violations and international crimes, alongside more traditional forms of reparation. The development of victims’ right to justice invites a reconsideration of the role and the rights of victims in criminal proceedings. It is argued that if victims have a right to the prosecution of human rights offenders as an integral component of their right to remedy, it is legitimate to assert that they should also be granted corresponding procedural rights in the criminal process. Through an extensive review of international legal instruments and practice and a comparative analysis of domestic criminal justice systems, this study demonstrates that the role of victims and the rights they possess in criminal proceedings have considerably expanded during the past three decades. The most significant development can be found in the law and practice of international and internationalized criminal tribunals, where procedures have been introduced aimed at enabling victims to participate in the proceedings. The incorporation of a regime of victim redress within the framework of international criminal tribunals not only represents an extension of the mandate of international criminal justice but also confirms a shift in the way in which redress is conceptualised at the international level. vii Acknowledgements This thesis benefited from the insightful comments, advice and support of several people. First and foremost, I wish to thank my supervisor Professor Francesco Francioni for his guidance, his readiness to discuss ideas and for his ongoing encouragement. I am also grateful to Professor Nehal Bhuta, Professor Micaela Frulli and Judge Sylvia Steiner for agreeing to sit on the jury for my PhD defence and for providing valuable comments on this study. I equally wish to thank the members of the EUI Working Group on International Criminal Law, an excellent forum for testing my assumptions and arguments and for developing new ones. During my time as a PhD researcher at the EUI I had the opportunity to visit a number of institutions. I wish to thank, in particular, the staff of the Office of the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, and both the Office of the Pre-Trial Judge and the Victims’ Participation Unit of the Special Tribunal for Lebanon. In these institutions I met several people who gave me expert advice on the procedure of international criminal tribunals and who helped me develop my ideas. This thesis would not have come to light without the never-ending support of my family and friends. I am particularly indebted to my parents, Tina and Massimo, who sparked and nurtured my love for learning and who have always been willing to listen – to my recitals of nursery rhymes when I was three years old and conference presentations later on. For as long as I can recall, I have always tested my ideas out on them before setting them down on paper. My heartfelt thanks go to Omar for his love and understanding and for having taught me how to strike a balance between work and family time. Lastly, all my gratitude goes to the late Professor Antonio Cassese, to whose memory this thesis is dedicated, who first introduced me to the study of international law and co-supervised this thesis. His restless dedication to imagining further and better ways to protect and promote human rights will remain my lifelong inspiration.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Rebuilding community resilience in a post-war context: developing insight and recommendations - a qualitative study in Northern Sri Lanka

TL;DR: In view of the widespread trauma at the individual, family and collective levels, community based programmes to increase local awareness, knowledge and skills to deal with common mental health and psychosocial issues are recommended to rebuild family and community agency and resilience.
Journal ArticleDOI

Addressing collective trauma: conceptualisations and interventions

Daya Somasundaram
- 01 Dec 2014 - 
TL;DR: It is advocated that post disaster relief, rehabilitation and development programmes need to address the problem of collective trauma, particularly using integrated holistic approaches.
DissertationDOI

The right to justice for victims of human rights crimes

Abstract: The past three decades have seen increasing concern in the international community for the need to more effectively ‘do justice’ for victims of mass atrocities. At the same time, there is a growing recognition that such justice includes, together with the need to ensure that appropriate reparation is provided to victims, the criminal accountability of those responsible for the most serious crimes. This thesis argues that there is an intrinsic relationship between these two emerging values. In particular, it demonstrates that a right to justice, understood as the right to the determination of the individual criminal responsibility of wrongdoers, is emerging under international law as an imperative remedy for victims of gross human rights violations and international crimes, alongside more traditional forms of reparation. The development of victims’ right to justice invites a reconsideration of the role and the rights of victims in criminal proceedings. It is argued that if victims have a right to the prosecution of human rights offenders as an integral component of their right to remedy, it is legitimate to assert that they should also be granted corresponding procedural rights in the criminal process. Through an extensive review of international legal instruments and practice and a comparative analysis of domestic criminal justice systems, this study demonstrates that the role of victims and the rights they possess in criminal proceedings have considerably expanded during the past three decades. The most significant development can be found in the law and practice of international and internationalized criminal tribunals, where procedures have been introduced aimed at enabling victims to participate in the proceedings. The incorporation of a regime of victim redress within the framework of international criminal tribunals not only represents an extension of the mandate of international criminal justice but also confirms a shift in the way in which redress is conceptualised at the international level. vii Acknowledgements This thesis benefited from the insightful comments, advice and support of several people. First and foremost, I wish to thank my supervisor Professor Francesco Francioni for his guidance, his readiness to discuss ideas and for his ongoing encouragement. I am also grateful to Professor Nehal Bhuta, Professor Micaela Frulli and Judge Sylvia Steiner for agreeing to sit on the jury for my PhD defence and for providing valuable comments on this study. I equally wish to thank the members of the EUI Working Group on International Criminal Law, an excellent forum for testing my assumptions and arguments and for developing new ones. During my time as a PhD researcher at the EUI I had the opportunity to visit a number of institutions. I wish to thank, in particular, the staff of the Office of the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, and both the Office of the Pre-Trial Judge and the Victims’ Participation Unit of the Special Tribunal for Lebanon. In these institutions I met several people who gave me expert advice on the procedure of international criminal tribunals and who helped me develop my ideas. This thesis would not have come to light without the never-ending support of my family and friends. I am particularly indebted to my parents, Tina and Massimo, who sparked and nurtured my love for learning and who have always been willing to listen – to my recitals of nursery rhymes when I was three years old and conference presentations later on. For as long as I can recall, I have always tested my ideas out on them before setting them down on paper. My heartfelt thanks go to Omar for his love and understanding and for having taught me how to strike a balance between work and family time. Lastly, all my gratitude goes to the late Professor Antonio Cassese, to whose memory this thesis is dedicated, who first introduced me to the study of international law and co-supervised this thesis. His restless dedication to imagining further and better ways to protect and promote human rights will remain my lifelong inspiration.
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