Title: REPRESENTATION AND RESOURCE ISSUES IN INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW
Abstract: The issue of self-representation is becoming a persistent and critical refrain in the trial of senior (in particular) political and military officials for serious violations of international humanitarian law. In chapter 1 I discussed the development and application of the principle in the common and civil law systems, and in regional human rights courts, and foreshadowed its emergence and treatment in international and criminal courts and tribunals. The issue was of crucial importance in the Milošević trial. It threatened the trial's fairness, and adversely impacted on its expeditiousness. The critical issues surrounding self-representation in complex international criminal trials were developed more fully and analytically in this trial than in any other to date. Following a detailed discussion of the issue in Milošević, a comprehensive analysis of the emergence of self-representation in international criminal proceedings across the international criminal courts and tribunals is undertaken. An analysis of the proceedings which have dealt with problems related to self-representation reveals a range of approaches which have emerged to deal with different facts in different cases. The proliferation and importance of self-representation necessitates consideration of how to approach this issue in future international criminal trials.
Publication Year: 2010
Publication Date: 2010-03-04
Language: en
Type: book-chapter
Indexed In: ['crossref']
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