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Genocide Never Sleeps: Living Law at the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda

By: Publication details: New York: Cambridge University Press, 2021Description: 218ISBN:
  • 9781108707398
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 345.0251 ELT
Summary: Accounts of international criminal courts have tended to consist of reflections on abstract legal texts, on judgements and trial transcripts. Genocide Never Sleeps, based on ethnographic research at the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR), provides an alternative account, describing a messy, flawed human process in which legal practitioners faced with novel challenges sought to reconfigure long-standing habits and opinions while maintaining a commitment to 'justice'. From the challenges of simultaneous translation to collaborating with colleagues from different legal traditions, legal practitioners were forced to scrutinise that which normally remains assumed in domestic law. By providing an account of this process, Genocide Never Sleeps not only provides a unique insight into the exceptional nature of the ad hoc, improvised ICTR and the day-to-day practice of international criminal justice, but also holds up for fresh inspection much that is naturalised and assumed in unexceptional, domestic legal processes.
List(s) this item appears in: New Arrivals February 2025 - Law
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Book Book Alliance School of Law 345.0251 ELT (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available L10423
Book Book Alliance School of Law 345.0251 ELT (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available L10424
Reference Book Reference Book Alliance School of Law 345.0251 ELT (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not for loan L10421
Book Book Alliance School of Law 345.0251 ELT (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available L10422
Total holds: 0

Accounts of international criminal courts have tended to consist of reflections on abstract legal texts, on judgements and trial transcripts. Genocide Never Sleeps, based on ethnographic research at the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR), provides an alternative account, describing a messy, flawed human process in which legal practitioners faced with novel challenges sought to reconfigure long-standing habits and opinions while maintaining a commitment to 'justice'. From the challenges of simultaneous translation to collaborating with colleagues from different legal traditions, legal practitioners were forced to scrutinise that which normally remains assumed in domestic law. By providing an account of this process, Genocide Never Sleeps not only provides a unique insight into the exceptional nature of the ad hoc, improvised ICTR and the day-to-day practice of international criminal justice, but also holds up for fresh inspection much that is naturalised and assumed in unexceptional, domestic legal processes.

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