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Feminist engagement with international criminal law : norm transfer, complementarity, rape and consent / Eithne Dowds.

By: Dowds, Eithne [author.].
Material type: TextTextSeries: Studies in international law (Oxford, England): v. 72.Publisher: London : Hart, c2019Description: xx, 256 pages ; 24 cm.ISBN: 9781509921898; 1509921893.Subject(s): Rape as a weapon of war | Sexual consent | Complementarity (International law) | Feminist jurisprudence | Rape -- Law and legislation -- Great Britain | International and municipal law -- Great Britain | Complementarity (International law) | Feminist jurisprudence | Rape as a weapon of war | Rape -- Law and legislation | Sexual consent | International and municipal law | Great BritainAdditional physical formats: Online version:: Feminist engagement with international criminal lawDDC classification: 345.02532
Contents:
Rethinking feminist engagement with international criminal law : an introduction -- Feminism and international criminal law : key tensions -- The feminist strategy of norm transfer and the complementarity regime of the International Criminal Court -- Defining rape in international criminal law : development and divergence -- Rape in war, rape in peace : a new typology of the wrong of rape -- A feminist critique of the international legal definition(s) of rape and the prospect of norm transfer -- Conclusion : norm transfer as a dialogue
Summary: "The work introduces the feminist strategy of 'norm transfer' to international criminal law; that is that notion that international standards trickle down to the national level and fill in any gaps in domestic legislation. Situating this strategy within the complementarity regime of the International Criminal Court (ICC), norm transfer may occur in two stages: the first stage involves transposing international norms into domestic law on international crimes through 'implementing legislation'. The second involves filtering these norms into domestic law or practice on domestic crimes. The work has at its centre the case study of the crime of rape. It draws attention to calls by non-governmental organisations and scholars for the domestic adoption of the ICC definition of rape for the purposes of rape as a domestic crime. By applying the lens of norm transfer to this debate, the book illustrates gaps in this definition and argues that the ICCs position on consent is not as clear cut as first thought. The book argues that the definition is in need of revision. It goes further, setting out draft legislative amendments to the 'Elements of Crimes' for the ICC and its 'Rules of Procedure and Evidence'. Finally it turns its attention to the domestic landscape, suggesting amendments to the United Kingdom (UK) Sexual Offences Act 2003 and to the Youth Justice and Criminal Evidence Act 1999: thereby showing how the revised version of the ICC definition can be used in the United Kingdom context."--
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Books Books Prof. G. K. Chadha Library

South Asian University

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345.02532 D745f (Browse shelf) Available BK00013200
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Based on author's thesis (doctoral)--Queen's University of Belfast, 2017, issued under the title: The role of consent in defining the crime of rape in international criminal law : a normative account.

Includes bibliographical references (pages 216-240) and index.

Rethinking feminist engagement with international criminal law : an introduction -- Feminism and international criminal law : key tensions -- The feminist strategy of norm transfer and the complementarity regime of the International Criminal Court -- Defining rape in international criminal law : development and divergence -- Rape in war, rape in peace : a new typology of the wrong of rape -- A feminist critique of the international legal definition(s) of rape and the prospect of norm transfer -- Conclusion : norm transfer as a dialogue

"The work introduces the feminist strategy of 'norm transfer' to international criminal law; that is that notion that international standards trickle down to the national level and fill in any gaps in domestic legislation. Situating this strategy within the complementarity regime of the International Criminal Court (ICC), norm transfer may occur in two stages: the first stage involves transposing international norms into domestic law on international crimes through 'implementing legislation'. The second involves filtering these norms into domestic law or practice on domestic crimes. The work has at its centre the case study of the crime of rape. It draws attention to calls by non-governmental organisations and scholars for the domestic adoption of the ICC definition of rape for the purposes of rape as a domestic crime. By applying the lens of norm transfer to this debate, the book illustrates gaps in this definition and argues that the ICCs position on consent is not as clear cut as first thought. The book argues that the definition is in need of revision. It goes further, setting out draft legislative amendments to the 'Elements of Crimes' for the ICC and its 'Rules of Procedure and Evidence'. Finally it turns its attention to the domestic landscape, suggesting amendments to the United Kingdom (UK) Sexual Offences Act 2003 and to the Youth Justice and Criminal Evidence Act 1999: thereby showing how the revised version of the ICC definition can be used in the United Kingdom context."--

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