Examines how the first treaty-based international tribunal created by the UN and a member state applied the law to perpetrators of serious crimes in one of the worst civil conflicts in Africa in recent history and offered valuable contributions to the development of the nascent field of international criminal law.
This important book considers whether the Special Court for Sierra Leone (SCSL), which was established jointly through an unprecedented bilateral treaty between the United Nations (UN) and Sierra Leone in 2002, has made jurisprudential contributions to the development of the nascent and still unsettled field of international criminal law. A leading authority on the application of international criminal justice in Africa, Charles Jalloh argues that the SCSL, as an innovative hybrid international penal tribunal, made useful jurisprudential additions on key legal questions concerning greatest responsibility jurisdiction, the war crime of child recruitment, forced marriage as a crime against humanity, amnesty, immunity and the relationship between truth commissions and criminal courts. He demonstrates that some of the SCSL case law broke new ground, and in so doing, bequeathed a ''legal legacy'' that remains vital to the ongoing global fight against impunity for atrocity crimes and to the continued development of modern international criminal law.
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