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Justice in the Balkans: Prosecuting War Crimes in the Hague Tribunal (Chicago Series in Law and Society) [Hardcover]

John Hagan

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Book Description

6 Jan 2004 0226312283 978-0226312286
Called a fig leaf for inaction by many at its inception, the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia has surprised its critics by growing from an unfunded U.N. Security Council resolution to an institution with more than 1,000 employees and a $100 million annual budget. With Slobodan Milosevic now on trial and more than forty fellow indictees currently detained, the success of the Hague tribunal has forced many to reconsider the prospects of international justice. John Hagan's "Justice in the Balkans" is a powerful firsthand look at the inner workings of the tribunal as it has moved from an experimental organization initially viewed as irrelevant to the first truly effective international court since Nuremberg.
Creating an institution that transcends national borders is a challenge fraught with political and organizational difficulties, yet, as Hagan describes here, the Hague tribunal has increasingly met these difficulties head-on and overcome them. The chief reason for its success, he argues, is the people who have shaped it, particularly its charismatic chief prosecutor, Louise Arbour. With drama and immediacy, "Justice in the Balkans" re-creates how Arbour worked with others to turn the tribunal's fortunes around, reversing its initial failure to arrest and convict significant figures and advancing the tribunal's agenda to the point at which Arbour and her colleagues, including her successor, Carla Del Ponte (nicknamed the Bulldog), were able to indict Milosevic himself. Leading readers through the investigations and criminal proceedings of the tribunal, Hagan offers the most original account of the foundation and maturity of the institution.
"Justice in the Balkans" brilliantly shows how an international social movement for human rights in the Balkans was transformed into a pathbreaking legal institution and a new transnational legal field. The Hague tribunal becomes, in Hagan's work, a stellar example of how individuals working with collective purpose can make a profound difference.
"The Hague tribunal reaches into only one house of horrors among many; but, within the wisely precise remit given to it, it has beamed the light of justice into the darkness of man's inhumanity, to woman as well as to man."--"The Times" (London)

Product details

  • Hardcover: 272 pages
  • Publisher: University of Chicago Press (6 Jan 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0226312283
  • ISBN-13: 978-0226312286
  • Product Dimensions: 16.6 x 2.6 x 23.9 cm
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 629,438 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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"With our attention shifted from ethnic cleansing to global terrorism, we have lost track of what is at stake in The Hague, where the ad hoc International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia has been at work since 1994. With this penetrating analysis of the court''s workings, Hagan forcefully yanks us back. The arrest and trial of Slobodan Milosevic have been the sensational culmination of the process, but other crucial trials preceded it, including those of the perpetrators of Srebrenica and Foca. Hagan traces the complex interactions between investigatory and prosecutorial teams, the dynamics between witnesses and prosecution, and how the special leadership of three successive chief judges turned an unpromising start into a forceful finish. On the path from the Nuremberg trials to the 'liberal legalism' of the International Criminal Court, these proceedings, Hagan argues, stand as a milestone in the creation of humanitarian and international criminal law."
--R

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"Collectively," Louise Arbour remarked as chief prosecutor at The Hague, "we're linked to Nuremberg. Read the first page
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Amazon.com: 1.0 out of 5 stars  1 review
2 of 12 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars Dubrovnik Hoax 24 Jan 2011
By John P. Maher - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
"Dubrovnik burning" was THE show on CNN in autumn 1991. And a complete fake. Florence Hamlish Levinsohn reported that Croats had set alight piles of tires in a parking lot just outside the walls of the Old City. Only service and military vehicles can be found in the Old City. An iconic photo by Peter Northall (Agence France Press) confirmed her report in a photo showing petroleum-based black smoke billowing in front of, not from, the Old City, along with smoke from burning diesel fuel of a boat in the Old Boat Harbor. The Old City is built of stone. TV atrocity-porn networks upped viewership ratings with these mendaciously framed images. Paul Davies of ITN (International Television News) won an award for his broadcast of Croats firing from inside the Old City at federal army positions and striking the ammo dump on Zarkovica hill. The smoke was theatrical here, too, but Davies' pics revealed that Croats had militarized the Old City. Susan Woodward (Google her) wrote: "An assault on Dubrovnik (beginning in early October), which was protected under the UN Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), was particularly significant in creating antagonism toward Serbia and the Army: the Croatian government had calculated in using sharpshooters on the Dubrovnik walls to provoke a YPA attack on the city..." It was Stipe Mesic, the Croat president of federal Yugoslavia [yes] who ordered JNA attacks on Dubrovnik. Serbophobe Maggie O'Kane and NY Times reporter Stephen Kinzer et al. truthfully reported that old Dubrovnik was substantially unscathed. I walked through the Old City on 25 March 1992 and filmed anti-Semitic and WW II vintage serbophobic graffiti inside the walls. Unlike most news hawks flocking there I could read the language. I found evidence of only the slightest damage. - The day before, a freighter from Germany had unloaded a consignment of tanks for Croatia from stores of the former East German army.
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