Using Systemic Integration to Interpret War Crimes at the International Criminal Court

From Vienna to Rome to Timbuktu

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Fragmentation and methodological inconsistency are already evident in the jurisprudence of the International Criminal Court (ICC). Part of the solution is to use the principle of systemic integration to interpret crimes consistently with customary international law. This book provides novel data on the ICC’s compliance with the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, focusing on how the failure to interpret war crimes consistently with custom leads to unnecessary fragmentation and misses important opportunities to clarify and develop the law. It offers a detailed case study on the war crime of denying a fair trial, tracing its interpretive foundations from the Vienna Convention to the Rome Statute to the administration of justice by rebel groups in Timbuktu.

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Matias Thomsen is a lecturer at the University of Tasmania, where he obtained his Ph.D. in 2022, and Senior Legal Advisor at the Diakonia IHL Centre. He has recently published works on cross-border humanitarian assistance and the protection of water in armed conflict.
Academic libraries specialising in international law, international criminal law, and international humanitarian law. Lawyers and judges working in international criminal law. Students of these same topics.
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