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Governance, Order, and the International Criminal Court Steven C. Roach (, Assistant Professor, University of South Florida)

Governance, Order, and the International Criminal Court By Steven C. Roach (, Assistant Professor, University of South Florida)

Governance, Order, and the International Criminal Court by Steven C. Roach (, Assistant Professor, University of South Florida)


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Summary

How has the International Criminal Court been able to evolve into a fairly effective, albeit relatively untested multi-level model of global governance? This volume explores this question and the novel predicament it represents for understanding the challenges of extending global governance and promoting global justice.

Governance, Order, and the International Criminal Court Summary

Governance, Order, and the International Criminal Court: Between Realpolitik and a Cosmopolitan Court by Steven C. Roach (, Assistant Professor, University of South Florida)

Since entering into force in July 2002, the International Criminal Court (ICC) has emerged as one of the most intriguing models of global governance. This innovative edited volume investigates the challenges facing the ICC, including the dynamics of politicized justice, US opposition, an evolving and flexible institutional design, the juridification of political evil, negative and positive global responsibility, the apparent conflict between peace and justice, and the cosmopolitanization of law. It argues that realpolitik has tested the ICC's capacity in a mostly positive manner and that the ambivalence between realpolitik and justice constitutes a novel predicament for extending global governance. The arguments of each essay are framed by a timely and original approach designed to assess the nuanced relationship between realpolitik and global justice. The approach - which interweaves four International Relations approaches, rationalism, constructivism, communicative action theory, and moral cosmopolitanism - is guided by the metaphor of the switch levers of train tracks, in which the Prosecutor and Judges serve as the pivotal agents switching the (crisscrossing) tracks of realpolitik and cosmopolitanism. With this visual aid, this volume of essays shows just how the ICC has become one of the most fascinating points of intersection between law, politics, and ethics.

About Steven C. Roach (, Assistant Professor, University of South Florida)

Dr. Steven Roach is Assistant Professor in the Department of Government and International Affairs at the University of South Florida. His research interests focus on the intersection of international law and politics, critical theory, and global governance. He is the author of Critical Theory of International Politics (forthcoming 2009), Politicizing the International Criminal Court: The Convergence of Politics, Ethics, and Law (2006), Cultural Autonomy, Minority Rights and Globalization (2005), co-author of International Relations: The Key Concepts (2008), and is editor of Critical Theory and International Relations: A Reader (2008).He has published numerous articles on law and politics and is currently working on a book project that focuses on the evolution of the human rights regime.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Global Governance in Context ; PART I. REALPOLITIK AND RATIONALISM ; 1. Embedded Realpolitik? Re-evaluating United States' Opposition to the International Criminal Court ; 2. From Realism to Legalization: A Rationalist Assessment of the International Criminal Court and its Role in the Democratic Republic of Congo ; PART II: CONSTRUCTIVISM, LEGITIMACY, AND COLLECTIVE ACCOUNTABILITY ; 3. Explaining the International Criminal Court: A Practice Test for Rationalist and Constructivist Approaches ; 4. The Politics of Discursive Legitimacy: Understanding the Implications of Prosecutorial Discretion at the ICC ; 5. Anarchy is What Criminal Lawyers and other Actors Make of it: International Criminal Justice as an Institution of International and World society ; PART III: COSMOPOLITANISM AND GLOBAL ORDER ; 6. Political Evil, Cosmopolitan Realism, and the Normative Ambivalence of the International Criminal Court ; 7. Four Cosmopolitan Projects: the International Criminal Court in Context ; 8. The Cosmopolitan Test: Universal Morality and the Challenge of the Darfur Genocide ; 9. Justice of the Peace? Future Challenges and Prospects for a Cosmopolitan Court

Additional information

NPB9780199546732
9780199546732
0199546738
Governance, Order, and the International Criminal Court: Between Realpolitik and a Cosmopolitan Court by Steven C. Roach (, Assistant Professor, University of South Florida)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press
2009-05-07
302
N/A
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