New Book of the Week- Law War and Crime
Law, War and
Crime War Crimes Trials and the Reinvention of International
Law/ Gerry Simpson Cambridge : Polity, 2007.
War crimes. War crime trials.
From events at Nuremberg and Tokyo after World War II, to the
recent trials of Slobodan Milošević and Saddam Hussein, war crimes
trials are an increasingly pervasive feature of the aftermath of
conflict. In his new book, Law, War and Crime, Gerry Simpson
explores the meaning and effect of such trials, and places them in
their broader political and cultural contexts. The book traces the
development of the war crimes field from its origins in the
outlawing of piracy to its contemporary manifestation in the
establishment of the International Criminal Court in The
Hague.
Simpson argues that the field of war crimes is constituted by a
number of tensions between, for example, politics and law, local
justice and cosmopolitan reckoning, collective guilt and individual
responsibility, and between the instinct that war, at worst, is an
error and the conviction that war is a crime.
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