R.J. Hamilton’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Bosnia v. Serbia: Lessons from the Encounter of the International Court of Justice with the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia
  • Article

March 2008

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44 Reads

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29 Citations

Leiden Journal of International Law

R.J. Goldstone

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R.J. Hamilton

This article uses the recent judgment of the ICJ in Bosnia v. Serbia to highlight the potential problems that arise when international courts have to adjudicate on overlapping situations. It describes the dispute between the ICJ and the ICTY on the appropriate legal standard for the attribution of state responsibility, and finds that the ICJ’s approach in this case suggests that those keen to minimize the fragmentation of international law between adjudicative bodies should not overlook the need for consistency within those bodies. With regard to fact finding, this article raises serious concerns about the manner in which the ICJ relied on the ICTY’s work. The decision of the ICJ not to demand crucial documents from Serbia is discussed and criticized. Based on its approach to fact finding in this case, doubts are raised as to whether the ICJ will ever hold a state responsible for genocide outside the parameters of the prior criminal convictions of individual perpetrators. © 2008, Foundation of the Leiden Journal of International Law. All rights reserved.

Citations (1)


... However, in February 2007, the ICJ issued a ruling that cleared Serbia of direct responsibility for the genocide and any complicity in the genocide that happened between 1992 and 1995. Also, the ruling reiterated the ICTY decision that the only confirmed case of genocide in Bosnia is the one committed by the Bosnian Serb forces in Srebrenica (Goldstone & Hamilton, 2008). Finally, as much as the Bosniak intellectuals and leaders experienced the ICJ's ruling as an insult, Serbia's authorities were relieved. ...

Reference:

Local Uses of International Criminal Justice in Bosnia-Herzegovina: Transcending Divisions or Building Parallel Worlds?
Bosnia v. Serbia: Lessons from the Encounter of the International Court of Justice with the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia
  • Citing Article
  • March 2008

Leiden Journal of International Law