将“法律”定位为国际刑事法院学术话语中的“文化”——弗雷泽和麦戈尼格尔·莱赫的《国际刑事法院法律与文化的交叉》反思

IF 0.6 4区 社会学 Q2 LAW International Journal of Law in Context Pub Date : 2022-08-19 DOI:10.1017/S1744552322000295
Tomas Hamilton
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在关于国际刑事法院的丰富文献中,在国际刑法学术、过渡时期司法和国际关系中,对“法律和文化”的研究有着悠久的渊源。国际刑事法院于2002年7月1日开始运作后,几年后,第一本关于国际刑事法院法律和文化的专著才出版,尤其是Sarah Nouwen的《火线上的互补性》(2013)和Phil Clark的《遥远的正义》(2018)。这一延迟反映了多年来有经验的学者对法院进行有益评论所需的实地研究。这些学者的写作得益于他们在国际刑事法院情况国家的长期实地考察,使他们能够对受影响社区的生活有意义的了解,从而分析国际刑事法院的影响。例如,克拉克的书是国际刑事法院情境国家11年研究和实地调查的成果(Clark,2018)。这些与受害者和幸存者的广泛接触为我们这些工作必然集中在海牙诉讼程序上的人带来了对国际刑事法院的新看法,而对于那些我们相信或希望我们(积极)影响他们生活的人来说,他们不可避免地无法声称真正长期熟悉国际刑事法院诉讼程序的当地意义。执行良好的实地研究有很多可以提供的,因为它可以在智力上与海牙的法庭程序保持距离,同时在智力上接近受影响社区的国际刑事司法犯罪地点。
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Situating ‘law’ as ‘culture’ in scholarly discourse on the International Criminal Court: a reflection on Fraser and McGonigle Leyh's Intersections of Law and Culture at the International Criminal Court
Within the rich literature on the International Criminal Court (ICC), across international criminal law scholarship, transitional justice and international relations, the study of ‘law and culture’ has a lengthy pedigree. After the ICC came into operation on 1 July 2002, several years followed before the first monographs on the Court's law and culture were published, notably Sarah Nouwen's Complementarity in the Line of Fire (2013) and Phil Clark's Distant Justice (2018). This delay reflected the years of field-based research necessary for empirically minded scholars to usefully comment on the Court. The writing of these scholars was informed by long periods spent in the field in ICC situation countries, enabling them to bring a meaningful understanding of the lives of affected communities to their analysis of the Court's impact. Clark's book, for instance, was the culmination of eleven years of research and fieldwork in ICC situation countries (Clark, 2018). These extensive periods of contact with victims and survivors have brought fresh perspectives on the ICC to those of us whose work is, necessarily, focused on proceedings in The Hague and who are, inevitably, unable to claim genuine long-term familiarity with the local meaning of the Court's proceedings for those whose lives we believe or hope we are (positively) impacting. Well-executed field-based research has so much to offer because it can be at once intellectually distanced from court proceedings in The Hague, while intellectually proximate to the locus delicti of international criminal justice in affected communities.
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47
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