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Evaluation Scale

Points

Mark(s)

ECTS mark(s)

45-50

5

A

44-40

4

B

39-35

4

C

34-31

3

D

30-26

3

E

25-15

2

F

15-0

2

FX

Unit Three

International c riminal Law

Section A

Warmer:

1. How would you express the quotation in your own words?

Do you agree with the quotations? Why or why not?

1. You can’t separate peace from freedom because no one can be at peace unless he has his freedom.

(Malcolm X, an African-American Muslim minister, public speaker and human rights activist.)

2. The idea of all-out nuclear war is unsettling.

(Walter Goodman, a British painter.)

3. A lack of protest can confirm the perpetrators’ faith in what they are doing.

(Ervin Staub, a Professor of Psychology, his work “The psychology of mass violence and genocide”).

4. Crime does not pay … as well as politics.

(Alfred E. Newman, the fictional mascot and iconic cover boy of “Mad” magazine.)

Notes: perpetrator – злочинець, порушник

Section b Reading and speaking

Before you read:

2. Do your best to understand the meaning of the terms “international criminal law”, “crimes against humanity”, “crimes against peace”, “war crimes”, “transnational crimes”.

Match each term on the left with its explanation on the right.

a) international criminal law

1. a serious attack on human dignity or grave humiliation or a degradation of one or more human beings

b) crime against humanity

2. violations of established protections of the laws of war, but also include failures to adhere to norms of procedure and rules of battle

c) crime against peace

3. is a branch of law which deals with international crimes and the courts and tribunals set up to adjudicate cases in which persons have incurred international criminal responsibility

d) war crimes

4. refer to crime that takes place across national borders

e) transnational crimes

5. refer to planning, preparation, initiation, or waging of wars of aggression, or a war in violation of international treaties, agreements or assurances

3. Reading tasks:

Read through the text and find answers to the questions that follow it.

International Criminal Law

The term “international criminal law” is more often a useful way of describing those aspects of international law that are concerned with crimes having an international aspect. Although only a tiny number of criminal cases have an international element and they are often serious in nature.

A number of crimes against international law are created by treaty and convention. Some of these crimes are prosecuted before international courts and tribunals. But more difficult questions of jurisdiction arise when the issue is whether a person, natural or fictitious, can be prosecuted for breach of public international law in the municipal courts of the state in which an arrest is made.

Crimes against humanity are particularly offences in that they constitute a serious attack on human dignity or grave humiliation or a degradation of one or more human beings. Murder, extermination, torture, rape and political, racial, or religious persecution and other inhumane acts reach the threshold of crimes against humanity only if they are part of a widespread or systematic practice. Isolated inhumane acts of this nature may constitute grave infringements of human rights, or depending on the circumstances, war crimes, but may fall short of falling into the category of crimes under discussion.

The Holodomor has been recognized as a crime against humanity by the European Parliament.

Crimes against peace, in international law, refer to planning, preparation, initiation, or waging of wars of aggression, or a war in violation of international treaties, agreements or assurances, or participation in a common plan or conspiracy for the accomplishment of any of the foregoing.

Colloquial definitions of war crime include violations of established protections of the laws of war, but also include failures to adhere to norms of procedure and rules of battle, such as attacking those displaying a peaceful flag of truce, or using that same flag as a ruse of war to mount an attack. Attacking enemy troops while they are being deployed by way of a parachute is not a war crime. War crimes include such acts as mistreatment of prisoners of war or civilians. War crimes are sometimes part of instances of mass murder and genocide though these crimes are more broadly covered under international humanitarian law described as crimes against humanity. War crimes are significant in international humanitarian law because it is an area where international tribunals have been convened.

Piracy is any illegal act of violence or detention committed on the high seas for private ends by a private ship against another ship. Warships of any state may board a foreign-registered ship on the high seas that is suspected of piracy. If it proves to be a private ship, it can be seized and those on board arrested of the warship.

Slavery is an even older practice, and is still with us today. Although there have been various treaties seeking to combat slavery, and it is now accepted that slavery is prohibited by customary international law.

Genocide defines as any acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group. It is sometimes grouped together with crimes against humanity, and, like the latter, can be committed in peacetime as well as during an armed conflict. But what distinguished it from crimes against humanity is that the acts must be committed “with intent to destroy” a group, so putting it in a class of its own. Example: crimes committed in the former Yugoslavia against ethnic groups could be classified as genocide, and that most of the acts described as “ethnic cleaning” were rather crimes against humanity, such as forcible transfers of population. On the other hand, the mass murder in Rwanda in 1994 of the Hutu by the Tutsi was clearly genocide. Crimes against humanity may be seen as collective violations of basic human rights, rather than those of an individual.

Transnational crimes refer to crime that takes place across national borders. The term “transnational” describes crimes that are not only international (that is, crimes that cross borders between countries), but crimes that by their nature involve border crossings as an essential part of the criminal activity. Transnational crimes also include crimes that take place in one country, but their consequences significantly affect another country. Examples of transnational crimes include the human trafficking, people smuggling, smuggling/trafficking of goods (such as arms trafficking and drug trafficking), sex slavery, and (non-domestic) terrorism. Transnational organized crime (TOC) refers specifically to transnational crime carried out by organized crime organizations.

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