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Publications
Publications (19)
The negotiation of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court was initiated not by states eager to remove impunity for core international crimes such as genocide or crimes against humanity, but by small states that wanted an international tribunal to try drug trafficking offences. Their motivations were complex. The system of indirect con...
In response to an article recently published in this Journal by Amir Attaran, Roger Bate and Megan Kendall regarding counterfeiting medicine, the authors dispute Attaran, Bate and Kendall’s
understanding of the problem on several points. These points include the choice of a forum such as the WHO for treaty negotiations
and the neglect of the pre-ex...
On the road to the Nuremberg International Military Tribunal (IMT) theories of collective criminal responsibility for both
aggression and all offences that are a consequence of that aggression were developed by US officials. While this project was
largely frustrated at Nuremberg, it was more highly developed and more positively received at the Toky...
This article reviews the development to date of the draft Protocol on the Illicit Trade in Tobacco Products currently under negotiation as a supplement to the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control. It suggests that diversion from the licit trade into the illicit trade is the main target of the draft Protocol. It examines the process of developmen...
This article examines the arguments for and against the potential expansion of the International Criminal Court's substantive jurisdiction over treaty crimes at the 2010 Review Conference, and suggests alternative venues outside of national jurisdiction that could be developed for adjudication of these crimes.
International criminal law is currently subdivided into international criminal law stricto sensu — the so-called core crimes — and crimes of international concern — the so-called treaty crimes. This article suggests that the latter category can be appropriately relabelled transnational criminal law to find a doctrinal match for the criminological t...
This study examines the suppression through international law of the illicit production, supply and use of drugs. The study focuses upon the provisions relating to the suppression of illicit drugs in the 1961 Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, the 1971 Psychotropic Convention, the 1972 Protocol to the Single Convention and the 1988 United Nations...
Thesis (LLM)--University of Natal, Durban, 1989. Includes bibliographical references.