Contents
Part IIReception and contestation
6In the shadow of Kwoyelo’s trial: the ICC and complementarity in Uganda
7A story of missed opportunities: the role of the International Criminal Court in the Democratic Republic of Congo
8The justice vanguard: the role of civil society in seeking accountability for Kenya’s post-election violence
9‘They told us we would be part of history’: reflections on the civil society intermediary experience in the Great Lakes region
Part IIIPractices of inclusion and exclusion
10Challenges and limitations of outreach: from the ICTY to the ICC
11‘We ask for justice, you give us law’: the rule of law, economic markets and the reconfiguration of victimhood
12Refracted justice: the imagined victim and the International Criminal Court
14Beyond the restorative turn: the limits of legal humanitarianism
Part IVPolitics and legal pluralism
15All roads lead to Rome: implementation and domestic politics in Kenya and Uganda
16Applying and ‘misapplying’ the Rome Statute in the Democratic Republic of Congo
17Beyond the ‘shadow’ of the ICC: struggles over control of the conflict narrative in Colombia
18Between justice and politics: the ICC’s intervention in Libya