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Transfer rules
For details about transfer and registration rules from the LLM Old Regulations to the LLM Revised Regulations: more >>
(pdf: 5pgs, 65KB; New window).

Postgraduate study in Laws:

Master of Laws (LLM), Postgraduate Diploma and Postgraduate Certificate

Course outline (date of availability to be confirmed)

International criminal law
Students are advised that the subject demands some previous knowledge of public international law.
Section A: The general context of international criminal law
· International law principles of State jurisdiction
· Treaty provisions requiring States to criminalize conduct
· Direct criminal responsibility under international law
· The principle of universal jurisdiction
· Customary international law and conventional international law
Section B: Substantive international crimes
· Defining the elements of crimes
· War crimes
· Crimes against humanity
· Genocide
· Aggression and crimes against peace
· Treaty-based crimes
· Emerging international crimes
Section C: International criminal courts and tribunals
· Jurisdiction and organisation of international criminal courts and tribunals
· Co-operation with international criminal courts and tribunals
· Powers of international criminal courts and tribunals
· Investigations, prosecutions, appeals, revision and enforcement of sentences
Section D: General principles of international criminal law
· Aut dedere aut judicare (“extradite or prosecute”)
· International criminal law and international human rights law
· Jurisdictional immunities
· Unlawful abductions
· The “general part” of criminal law (modes of participation in crimes, defences and concurrence of crimes)
Sequence:
Section A first.
Textbooks:
Antonio Cassese, International Criminal Law 2nd ed (Oxford: Oxford University Press,
2004), ISBN: 9780199259397
Claire De Than and Edwin Shorts, International Criminal Law and Human Rights (London: Sweet & Maxwell, 2003), ISBN: 9780421722507
Philippe Sands (ed), From Nuremberg to The Hague: The Future of International Criminal Justice (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003), ISBN: 9780521536769