Atrocity Crimes Children and International Criminal Courts: Killing Childhood

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This book shows how international criminal courts have paid only limited and inconsistent attention to atrocity crimes affecting children. It elucidates the many structural, legal, financial and even attitudinal obstacles, often overlapping, that have contributed to the international courts’ focus on the experience of adults, rendering children almost invisible. It reviews whether and how different international and hybrid criminal jurisdictions have considered international crimes committed against or by children. The book also considers how international criminal justice can help contribute to the recognition of the specific impact that international crimes have on children, whether as victims or as participants, and strengthen their protection. Finally, it proposes an agenda to improve this situation, making specific recommendations encompassing the urgent need to further elaborate child-friendly procedures. It also calls for international investigative and prosecutorial strategies to be less adult-centric and broaden the scope of crimes against children beyond the focus on child-soldiers. This book is an invaluable resource for academics, researchers and fieldworkers in the areas of international criminal law, international human rights law/child rights, international humanitarian law, child protection and transitional justice.

Author(s): Cécile Aptel
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2023

Language: English
Pages: 289
City: London

Cover
Endorsement
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Overall summary
Abbreviations and acronyms
1. Introduction
1 International accountability for atrocity crimes
1.1 International and hybrid criminal courts
1.2 International atrocity crimes
2 Defining a ‘child’
3 How international crimes affect children
4 Arguments and structure
2. The Legal Protection of Children under International Law
1 International human rights law
1.1 The human rights of children
1.2 Child rights
1.3 The Convention on the Rights of the Child
2 International humanitarian law
2.1 IHL treaties
2.2 Customary IHL
3 The prohibition of the recruitment and use of children in
hostilities
4 The protection of children from recruitment and use in hostilities
5 Procedural guarantees
5.1 Protection of children during investigations
5.2 Protection in court
5.3 Participation of child-victims in the proceedings
6 Conclusion
3. International Courts and Child-Specific Crimes
1 Forcible transfer of children to another group
1.1 The Genocide Convention
1.2 Forcible transfers of children in Nazi Germany
1.3 The International Criminal Tribunals for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda
1.4 The International Criminal Court
2 Conscripting or enlisting children or using them to participate actively in hostilities
2.1 The International Military Tribunal of Nuremberg
2.2 The Special Court for Sierra Leone
2.3 The International Criminal Court
2.4 Salient jurisprudential findings
3 Attacks against buildings dedicated to education
4. International Courts and Child-Victims of Generic Atrocity Crimes
1 The International Military Tribunal of Nuremberg
1.1 Crimes against children as part of the civilian population
1.2 Crimes against Jewish children
1.3 Nazi indoctrination and mobilisation of youth
1.4 Concluding remarks
2 The International Military Tribunal for the Far East
2.1 Indoctrination
2.2 Crimes against non-Japanese children in occupied territories
2.3 Sexual crimes
2.4 Concluding remarks
3 The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia
3.1 Crimes against children targeting the civilian population in general or a specific group
3.2 Killing of boys
3.3 Sexual crimes
4 The International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda
4.1 Children victims of genocide
4.2 Sexual crimes
5 The Special Court for Sierra Leone
5.1 Additional crimes against ‘child-soldiers’
5.2 Sexual crimes
5.3 Forced marriage
5.4 Crimes against other children
6 The International Criminal Court
6.1 The Lubanga case
6.2 The Katanga case
6.3 The Ntaganda case
6.4 The Ongwen case
7 Conclusion
5. International Courts and Children Involved in International Crimes
1 Minimum age of criminal responsibility and juvenile justice
1.1 Juvenile justice
1.2 Minimum age of criminal responsibility
2 International criminal jurisdictions and children involved in crimes
2.1 The International Military Tribunals of Nuremberg and Tokyo
2.2 The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia
2.3 The International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda
2.4 Hybrid or mixed courts
2.5 The International Criminal Court
3 Children involved in crimes as witnesses before international courts
4 What is in the best interests of the children involved in crimes?
5 Children involved in crimes and transitional justice
5.1 Peru
5.2 Sierra Leone
5.3 East Timor
5.4 Liberia
5.5 Concluding remarks
6. Conclusion and Recommendations
1 International criminal courts and children: accomplishments and failures
1.1 The International Military Tribunal of Nuremberg
1.2 The International Military Tribunal of Tokyo
1.3 The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia
1.4 The International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda
1.5 The Special Court for Sierra Leone
1.6 East Timor Special Panels for Serious Crimes
1.7 The International Criminal Court
1.8 Concluding remarks
2 Explaining these accomplishments and failures
2.1 External circumstances
2.2 Surmounting internal obstacles
3 An agenda for improvement
3.1 Child-friendly procedures
3.2 Beyond child-soldiers: a broader scope
3.3 Rethinking the international investigative and prosecutorial strategies
4 Conclusion
Bibliography
Index