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Like Ancient Beacons: The European Union and the International Criminal Court – Reflections from afar on a Chapter of European Foreign Policy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 March 2019

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That the Law is never frozen in time and space is quite a trivial insight – but one, however, that is nonetheless particularly true for the area of international human rights law and the jurisdiction to see human rights norms respected and enforced. No less is it true for international criminal law and European law. It is, of course, true at the intersection of these three fields of the law as well, exactly the place I intend to explore in this paper. And, as we shall see, poetry, that rarely unveiled subtext of the law, is never steady in its foundations.

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Copyright © 2004 by German Law Journal GbR 

References

1 A development strikingly mirrored in the books. See and compare, e.g., the 3rd edition and the recently published 5th edition of the classical German textbook edited by Knut Ipsen: Völkerrecht (K. Ipsen / E. Menzel, eds., 3RD ed., 1990) and Völkerrecht (K. Ipsen, ed., 5TH ed., 2004). For an excellent introduction see A. Cassese, International Criminal Law (2003), for a discussion of international criminal law in a human rights law context, see M. Lattimer, Enforcing Human Rights through International Criminal Law, in Justice for Crimes Against Humanity 387 – 418 (M. Lattimer / P. Sands, eds., 2003).Google Scholar

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