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Fair Trials and the International Criminal Tribunals - Whose Case Is It Anyway? The Right of an Accused to Defend Himself in Person before International Criminal Courts
Published/Copyright:
April 23, 2007
This article argues that the right to self-representation should be upheld in international criminal trials.
Published Online: 2007-4-23
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Introduction
- General Editor's Introduction to Essays on Fairness and Evidence in War Crimes Trials
- Article
- Objective Responsibility: Show Trials and War Crimes Trials
- Fair Trials and the International Criminal Tribunals - Whose Case Is It Anyway? The Right of an Accused to Defend Himself in Person before International Criminal Courts
- Overcoming Logistical and Structural Barriers to Fair Trials at International Tribunals
- Unfortunate Legacies: Hearsay, Ex Parte Affidavits and Anonymous Witnesses at the IHT
- Fair Trials for War Criminals
- Disparities between Evidentiary Rules before International Courts and Tribunals: Can a Clash Be Avoided?
- A Long Way from Home: Witnesses before International Criminal Tribunals
- Fair Trials and National Security Evidence
Keywords for this article
fair trials;
international criminal tribunals;
the right to defend oneself in person
Articles in the same Issue
- Introduction
- General Editor's Introduction to Essays on Fairness and Evidence in War Crimes Trials
- Article
- Objective Responsibility: Show Trials and War Crimes Trials
- Fair Trials and the International Criminal Tribunals - Whose Case Is It Anyway? The Right of an Accused to Defend Himself in Person before International Criminal Courts
- Overcoming Logistical and Structural Barriers to Fair Trials at International Tribunals
- Unfortunate Legacies: Hearsay, Ex Parte Affidavits and Anonymous Witnesses at the IHT
- Fair Trials for War Criminals
- Disparities between Evidentiary Rules before International Courts and Tribunals: Can a Clash Be Avoided?
- A Long Way from Home: Witnesses before International Criminal Tribunals
- Fair Trials and National Security Evidence