Synopses & Reviews
This book rethinks how people who perpetrate genocide should be punished. Based on 'on the ground' analysis from Rwanda, East Timor, Uganda and other places afflicted by atrocity, this book concludes that the international community's preference for prosecution and imprisonment may not be as effective as we hope. Instead, this book calls for a broader-based response to atrocity that welcomes bottom-up perspectives, including restorative, reparative, and reintegrative traditions, that differ from the classic Western criminal trial. The time has come for international criminal law as a discipline to move beyond nascence and to welcome a second, and even more challenging, stage: that of re-appraisal, maturation, and self-improvement.
Synopsis
This book examines the sentencing differences for atrocities such as genocide in an international setting.
About the Author
Mark A. Drumbl is Professor of Law at the School of Law, Washington &Lee University, where he also serves as Director of the Transnational Law Institute, and has repeatedly held the Ethan Allen Faculty Fellowship. He studied at McGill University (B.A., M.A.), Institut d'etudes politiques, University of Toronto (LL.B.), abd Columbia University (LL.M., J.S.D.) and has held visiting appointments at University College, Oxford University, Trinity College Dublin, Vanderbilt University, and the University of Ottawa. In 2005 his academic work received the Association of American Law Schools Scholarly Papers Prize and in 2003 the International Association of Penal Law (U.S. Section) Best Article Prize. Dr. Drumbl has published extensively on international law and criminal justice, including in the NYU, Michigan, and Northwestern law reviews, Human Rights Quartery, American Journal of International Law, and Columbia Journal of Transnational Law. He has also authored chapters in edited volumes and frequenty speaks at academic conferences and symposia. Prior to entering law teaching, Dr. Drumbl was judicial cleark to Justice Frank Iacobucci of the Supreme Court of Canada. His practice experience includes an appointment as co-counsel for the Canadian Chief-of-Defense Staff before the Royal Commission investigating military wrongdoing in the UN Somalia Mission. Professor Drumbl has served as an expert in litigation in the U.S. federal courts, as defense counsel in the Rwandan genocide trials, and has taught international law in Pakistan and Brazil. He is a frequent commentator in national print media, radio, and television.