DownloadThe Portobello Bookshop Gift Guide 2024

Reducing Genocide to Law

Definition, Meaning, and the Ultimate Crime

Payam Akhavan author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Published:26th Jan '12

Currently unavailable, currently targeted to be due back around 2nd December 2024, but could change

This hardback is available in another edition too:

Reducing Genocide to Law cover

Why is genocide the 'ultimate crime' and does this distinction make any difference in confronting evil?

This original and daring book asks the simple but overlooked question of whether genocide is in fact the 'ultimate crime'. It begins by challenging the myth that other international crimes are less important and goes on to explore the sensibility of reducing overwhelming evil to the confines of legal reasoning.Could the prevailing view that genocide is the ultimate crime be wrong? Is it possible that it is actually on an equal footing with war crimes and crimes against humanity? Is the power of the word genocide derived from something other than jurisprudence? And why should a hierarchical abstraction assume such importance in conferring meaning on suffering and injustice? Could reducing a reality that is beyond reason and words into a fixed category undermine the very progress and justice that such labelling purports to achieve? For some, these questions may border on the international law equivalent of blasphemy. This original and daring book, written by a renowned scholar and practitioner who was the first Legal Advisor to the UN Prosecutor at The Hague, is a probing reflection on empathy and our faith in global justice.

'Without a doubt, the first half of the book is the best, as it deals with what Akhavan clearly knows inside and out: domestic and international criminal law … Akhavan provides an excellent analysis of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia and International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda's jurisprudence on the crime of genocide as well as a solid review of the many debates surrounding the meaning, legal and otherwise, of this particular atrocity.' Maureen S. Hiebert, Canadian Yearbook of International Law

ISBN: 9780521824415

Dimensions: 234mm x 158mm x 14mm

Weight: 460g

210 pages