Article contents
A New Influence of Legal Scholars? The Use of Academic Writings at International Criminal Courts and Tribunals
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 September 2018
Abstract
What role have international legal scholars played in the development of international criminal law? Building on recent studies of the citation practices of international courts, the article provides an empirical assessment of the use and functions of citations to scholarly writings in the judgments of international criminal courts and tribunals. Using a mixed-methods approach, the article combines: a) a quantitative analysis of judgments interpreting the law of war crimes across four international and hybrid courts; with b) qualitative interviews with judges and legal officers at the International Criminal Court (ICC), the ad hoc Tribunals, and the Special Court for Sierra Leone (SCSL). The article argues that scholarly writings have been strikingly visible in the judgments of international criminal courts and tribunals, and especially at the ICC, which entails significant implications for the functions of academic writings and the role of international legal scholars.
Keywords
- Type
- INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURTS AND TRIBUNALS
- Information
- Copyright
- © Foundation of the Leiden Journal of International Law 2018
Footnotes
Postdoctoral researcher, School of Global Studies, Gothenburg University [[email protected]]. I am grateful to Linnéa Gelot, Yuna C. Han, Johan Karlsson Schaffer, Zachary D. Kaufman, Leila Ullrich, Sara Usher, Claire Vergerio, and two anonymous reviewers for their comments on earlier drafts of this article, as well as to the participants of a panel on ‘The International Criminal Court’ at the Annual Convention of the International Studies Association in Atlanta on 18 March 2016 and the participants of an Early Career Workshop and the Socio-Legal Studies Discussion Group held at the Centre for Socio-Legal Studies, University of Oxford, on 20–21 June 2016 and 20 October 2016 respectively. All errors are mine.
References
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33 Interview with ICTY Judge, 16 December 2015, The Hague.
34 Interviews with ICTY Legal Officer, 3 December 2015, The Hague; ICTR Legal Officer, 5 December 2015, The Hague; ICTR Judge, 15 December 2015, phone interview.
35 Interview with ICTY Judge, 18 December 2015, The Hague.
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37 Following the request of some judges and legal officers, interviews were generally kept anonymous. To achieve a higher level of anonymization, references to specific interviews do not include a distinction between current or former judges and legal officers.
38 In addition, the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC) also delivered one trial judgment interpreting the law of war crimes during the relevant timeframe, see The Prosecutor v. Kaing Guek Eav alias Duch, Trial Judgment, Case No. 001/18-07-2007/ECCC/TC, 26 July 2010, at 400–69. As this judgment remained the ECCC’s only relevant judgment, however, the ECCC was excluded from this analysis.
39 As this coding aimed to capture the extent to which international criminal courts and tribunals engaged with different types of legal texts, it did not systematically distinguish between the ways in which these citations were used within the judgment. As a general observation, however, these references to a large extent served the purpose of supporting the interpretation of the law of war crimes proposed by the court. For example, 144 out of 154 citations to academic articles and monographs coded were used to build or support the argument of the court.
40 See Section 4.1 below.
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44 See Manley, supra note 8, at 207–8. Note, however, that Manley used a slightly different coding approach, for example regarding indirect citations. See ibid., at 197–9.
45 Treaty commentaries and dictionaries were included within the more general category of academic writings following the reasoning outlined above, namely that the decision of whether a text qualifies as ‘academic’ can best be made based on its publication format. Treaty commentaries in particular are typically published by academic publishers. A notable exception are the ICRC commentaries on the Geneva Convention and Additional Protocols I and II, which were cited regularly within the judicial interpretation of the law of war crimes. However, even in this case, it should be added that an extensive update of the ICRC commentaries on the Geneva Conventions was co-published by Cambridge University Press in 2016. With regard to dictionaries, the two dictionaries cited were the Oxford English Dictionary, published by Oxford University Press (seven citations), and Black’s Law Dictionary, published by West Publishing (three citations). Within the judicial interpretation of the law of war crimes, both dictionaries were referred to as a way of gaining insights on the meaning and usage of specific terms. For a similar categorization and reasoning, see Manley, supra note 8, at 193 and fn. 11.
46 See Darcy, supra note 36, at 111.
47 See Manley, supra note 8, at 207–8.
48 See The Prosecutor v. Thomas Lubanga Dyilo, Trial Judgment, Case No. ICC-01//04/-01/06, Trial Chamber I, 14 March 2012; The Prosecutor v. Jean-Pierre Bemba Gombo, Trial Judgment, Case No. ICC-01/05-01/08, Trial Chamber III, 21 March 2016.
49 Interview with ICC Judge, 26 November 2015, The Hague.
50 ICTR Legal Officer, 5 December 2015, The Hague. Similarly interview with ICTR Legal Officer, 26 January 2016, The Hague.
51 ICC Legal Officer, interview conducted on 1 December 2015, The Hague.
52 ICTR Judge, interview conducted on 15 December 2015, phone interview. Similarly interview with SCSL Judge, 6 February 2016, Kingston upon Thames.
53 Interview with ICTY Judge, 9 December 2015, The Hague. Similarly interview with ICTY Judge, 16 December 2015, The Hague.
54 ICC Legal Officer, interview conducted on 1 December 2015, The Hague.
55 ICC Legal Officer, interview conducted on 5 December 2015, The Hague.
56 ICTR Legal Officer, interview conducted on 5 December 2015, The Hague.
57 Interview with ICTY Legal Officer, 3 December 2015, The Hague.
58 Interview with ICC Judge, 26 November 2015, The Hague.
59 Interviews with ICTY Judge, 18 December 2015, The Hague; ICTR Judge, 25 November 2015, phone interview.
60 Interviews with ICTY Judge, 9 December 2015, The Hague; ICTY Judge, 16 December 2015, The Hague.
61 ICTY Judge, interview conducted on 16 December 2015, The Hague.
62 For example, interviews with ICC Legal Officer, 27 November 2015, The Hague; ICTY Legal Officer, 3 December 2015, The Hague.
63 Interviews with ICTY Judge, 16 December 2015, The Hague; ICTR Legal Officer, 26 January 2016, The Hague.
64 ICTR Legal Officer, interview conducted on 26 January 2016, The Hague.
65 Interviews with ICTY Judge, 9 December 2015, The Hague; ICTR Judge, 25 November 2015, phone interview; ICTR Legal Officer, 5 December 2015, The Hague; ICTR Judge, 15 December 2015, phone interview; ICTY Judge, 16 December 2015, The Hague; ICTY Judge, 18 December 2015, The Hague; ICTR Legal Officer, 26 January 2016, The Hague; SCSL Judge, 6 February 2016, Kingston upon Thames.
66 Interviews with ICTR Legal Officer, 5 December 2015, The Hague; ICTR Legal Officer, 26 January 2016, The Hague; ICC Legal Officer, 1 December 2015, The Hague.
67 ICTR Legal Officer, interview conducted on 5 December 2015, The Hague.
68 Interview with ICC Judge, 26 November 2015, The Hague.
69 ICTR Legal Officer, interview conducted on 5 December 2015, The Hague.
70 Interview with ICTY Judge, 9 December 2015, The Hague.
71 Ibid.; interview with ICTY Judge, 16 December 2015, The Hague. Similarly interviews with ICC Legal Officer, 1 December 2015, The Hague; ICTY Legal Officer, 3 December 2015, The Hague; ICTR Legal Officer, 5 December 2015, The Hague.
72 Mégret, F., ‘International Criminal Justice: A Critical Research Agenda’, in Schwöbel, C. (ed.), Critical Approaches to International Criminal Law: An Introduction (2014), 17, at 18Google Scholar. From a slightly different perspective see also von Bernstorff, J., ‘International Legal Scholarship as a Cooling Medium in International Law and Politics’, (2015) 25 EJIL 977, at 988CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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75 Ibid.
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83 ICTR Judge, interview conducted on 15 December 2015, phone interview.
84 ICTY Legal Officer, interview conducted on 3 December 2015, The Hague.
85 See Alter, K. and Helfer, L., ‘Nature or Nurture? Judicial Lawmaking in the European Court of Justice and the Andean Tribunal of Justice’, (2010) 64 International Organization 563, at 565, 584–6CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Relatedly, see also, for example, Cohen, A., ‘Transnational Statecraft: Legal Entrepreneurs, the European Field of Power and the Genesis of the European Constitution’, in Petersen, H. et al. (eds.), Paradoxes of European Legal Integration (2008), 111Google Scholar.
86 From a historical perspective see similarly Peters, A., ‘Realizing Utopia as a Scholarly Endeavour’, (2013) 24 LJIL 533, at 537Google Scholar.
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