Addressing violations of international humanitarian law through the international criminal justice system: A criminologist’s contribution

S. Sungi
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Abstract

The international criminal justice system has resorted to criminal sanctions as the sole response to international criminal offending, including international humanitarian law (IHL) violations. While responding to international criminal offending, the international criminal justice system has overly relied on utilitarianist and retributivist assumptions to criminal punishment that assumes the application of criminal law in enforcing compliance to societal norms in order to deter potential norm violators and to induce compliance. Furthermore, correcting criminal behaviour creates a sense of accountability and appeases victims of international humanitarian law violations and other international crimes. Arguments in support of this strategy also posit that it is important to take these steps because it brings a sense of respect to the rule of law or what is popularly known as fighting ‘impunity’. A reflection on the Nuremberg and the Tokyo trials following World War II seems to have influenced the criminalising of war crimes and other international crimes. On the other hand, criminologists over a century now have been studying causes of crime to influence public policy in crime prevention. It is, therefore, imperative to examine the aetiology of international humanitarian law violations through a criminological lens to inform international criminal justice policy on best approaches in responding to international crimes in general and war crimes in particular. The essay examines international humanitarian violations in the Democratic Republic of Congo to find out whether the international criminal justice system’s response to war crimes meet the purported stated goals of the international criminal justice system. The Lubanga case in the DRC situation is informative since it is the first conviction before the International Criminal Court.
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通过国际刑事司法系统处理违反国际人道主义法的行为:一位犯罪学家的贡献
国际刑事司法系统将刑事制裁作为对国际刑事犯罪,包括违反国际人道主义法行为的唯一反应。在应对国际刑事犯罪时,国际刑事司法系统过度依赖功利主义和报复主义对刑事惩罚的假设,这些假设假设适用刑法来强制遵守社会规范,以阻止潜在的违反规范者并诱导遵守。此外,纠正犯罪行为会产生一种责任感,并安抚违反国际人道主义法和其他国际罪行的受害者。支持这一战略的论点还认为,采取这些步骤很重要,因为它带来了对法治的尊重,或俗称的打击“有罪不罚”的感觉。对二战后纽伦堡审判和东京审判的反思似乎影响了对战争罪和其他国际罪行的刑事定罪。另一方面,一个多世纪以来,犯罪学家一直在研究犯罪的原因,以影响预防犯罪的公共政策。因此,必须从犯罪学的角度研究违反国际人道主义法的根源,以便为国际刑事司法政策提供关于应对一般国际罪行特别是战争罪行的最佳办法的信息。本文考察了刚果民主共和国的国际人道主义侵权行为,以了解国际刑事司法系统对战争罪的反应是否符合国际刑事司法系统据称的既定目标。卢班加案在刚果民主共和国的情况下具有参考价值,因为它是国际刑事法院的第一个定罪案件。
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