International Law

International Criminal Law

× Clear Filters
724 Articles
A U.S. Special Forces tactical vehicle watches over detainees during a night mission conducted jointly with the Afghan National Army in Shahak village March 29, 2004 in southeast Afghanistan.

The ICC’s Afghanistan Investigation: What’s at Stake for the U.S.?

The United States faces a tough predicament: How best to navigate the recent decision of the International Criminal Court (ICC) Prosecutor to seek to commence an investigation…

Corporate Criminal Accountability for International Crimes

Above: Flickr/The International Criminal Court Ed. note. This post  is the latest in our series on the upcoming U.S. Supreme Court case Jesner. v. Arab Bank, a case with implications…

The Long Arm of Justice: Ratko Mladić’s Conviction Should Keep Perpetrators of Atrocities Awake at Night

Today Ratko Mladić, the former Bosnian Serb General, was convicted by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) for genocide, crimes against humanity…

The Int’l Criminal Court’s Case against the United States in Afghanistan: How it happened and what the future holds

What happens when a global criminal court takes on the world’s dominant military power? That was the question earlier this month when the International Criminal Court’s Prosecutor…

The ICC’s New Burundi Investigation: Where Is the Court Headed?

The International Criminal Court announced Thursday that on Oct. 25 the Pre-Trial Chamber of the Court authorized the Prosecutor to commence an investigation in Burundi for alleged…
Map of Sierra Leone and Liberia.

Mohammed Jabbateh Conviction: A Human Rights Trial Cloaked in Immigration Crimes

On Oct. 18, a U.S. federal jury issued the first criminal conviction involving mass atrocities committed during Liberia’s First Civil War in the 1990s by a ULIMO rebel commander.…
Just Security

Recap of Recent Pieces on Just Security (Oct. 28-Nov. 3)

Cybersecurity and Cyber Conflict Robert S. Taylor, Cyber, Sovereignty, and North Korea–And the Risk of Inaction Michelle Richardson and Mike Godwin, What the White House Needs…
The ICC's flag, a white set of scales against a light blue background is shown.

An ICC Investigation of the U.S. in Afghanistan: What does it Mean?

The Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC) announced today that she will file a request with the judges of the Court to open an investigation in Afghanistan, including…

Libya’s Haftar and Liability of Superiors: Ordering Offenses v. Responsibility for Omissions

Further to Just Security’s coverage on Tuesday of the potential war crimes liability of U.S citizen/Libyan warlord General Khalifa Haftar, this article discusses the distinction…

Smoking Gun Videos Emerge: US Citizen, Libyan Warlord Haftar Ordering War Crimes

The International Criminal Court very recently issued an arrest warrant for a militia leader in Libya which should catch the attention of U.S. policymakers, diplomats and prosecutors…

Senate Appropriations Bill Rejects Trump’s Efforts to Downsize State Department and USAID

Last week, the Senate Committee on Appropriations, chaired by Sen. Thad Cochran (R-Miss.), approved a State & Foreign Operations Appropriations Bill for fiscal year 2018.…
Former ExxonMobil CEO Rex Tillerson, U.S. President-elect Donald Trump's nominee for Secretary of State, testifies during his confirmation hearing before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee January 11, 2017 on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC.

Key U.S. Foreign Policy Positions—including Ambassador for War Crimes—Saved from Getting Axed

Just Security recently broke the story that the State Department was considering shuttering or downgrading certain functional offices and Senate-confirmed ambassadorships within…
1-12 of 724 items

DON'T MISS A THING. Stay up to date with Just Security curated newsletters: