Book contents
- Criminological Approaches to International Criminal Law
- Criminological Approaches to International Criminal Law
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Preface
- Introduction: an interdisciplinary criminology of international criminal law
- 1 Criminological theory and international crimes: examining the potential
- 2 The relevance and application of empirical research methods to the study of international crimes
- 3 Understanding and responding to state crime: a criminological perspective
- 4 Investigating complex crime
- 5 Evidence in cases of mass criminality
- 6 Eyewitness psychology in the context of international criminal law
- 7 Therole of information systems in the prevention and detection of transnational and international crime
- 8 Usingthe macro–micro integrated theoretical model to understand the dynamics of collective violence
- 9 The anthropological dimension of international crimes and international criminal justice
- 10 Mental health and international crimes
- 11 Understanding collective violence: the communicative and performative qualities of violence in acts of belonging
- 12 Defining victims: a proposed typology for victims of war crimes and their need for reparation
- Index
11 - Understanding collective violence: the communicative and performative qualities of violence in acts of belonging
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2014
- Criminological Approaches to International Criminal Law
- Criminological Approaches to International Criminal Law
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Preface
- Introduction: an interdisciplinary criminology of international criminal law
- 1 Criminological theory and international crimes: examining the potential
- 2 The relevance and application of empirical research methods to the study of international crimes
- 3 Understanding and responding to state crime: a criminological perspective
- 4 Investigating complex crime
- 5 Evidence in cases of mass criminality
- 6 Eyewitness psychology in the context of international criminal law
- 7 Therole of information systems in the prevention and detection of transnational and international crime
- 8 Usingthe macro–micro integrated theoretical model to understand the dynamics of collective violence
- 9 The anthropological dimension of international crimes and international criminal justice
- 10 Mental health and international crimes
- 11 Understanding collective violence: the communicative and performative qualities of violence in acts of belonging
- 12 Defining victims: a proposed typology for victims of war crimes and their need for reparation
- Index
Summary
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Criminological Approaches to International Criminal Law , pp. 287 - 315Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2014
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