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Balancing ‘the International’ and ‘the Domestic’

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As the cornerstone of the International Criminal Court (ICC), the principle of complementarity provides that states have the primary responsibility to investigate and prosecute international crimes, and only when they… Click to show full abstract

As the cornerstone of the International Criminal Court (ICC), the principle of complementarity provides that states have the primary responsibility to investigate and prosecute international crimes, and only when they are inactive, unwilling or unable to genuinely investigate and prosecute the ICC may exercise its jurisdiction. However, the relevance of sentences and sanctions, their severity and modalities in the complementarity assessment (CA) is still ambiguous. Some scholars argue for sentences to play a role in the CA but do not elaborate on what an inadequate sanction is and how it can justify the ICC pre-empting a national prosecution. Others mainly focus on pardons or blanket amnesties, without addressing reduced or alternative sentences developed in the framework of peace negotiations. The existing gap may stall or complicate peace processes in post-conflict situations under the jurisdiction of the ICC where alternative sanctions can be the only viable way to reach an agreement between the warring parties. This article focuses on the role that sentences can play in the CA according to the Rome Statute, on what are the standards on adequacy of sentences/sanctions for international crimes, and analyses how alternative sanctions designed in transitional contexts can play out in such an assessment.

Keywords: balancing international; icc; international domestic

Journal Title: Journal of International Criminal Justice
Year Published: 2020

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