The United States and the International Criminal Court
Edited by
Sarah Sewall and Carl Kaysen
(Lenham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2000)
Project Directors' Report
Table of Contents
The United States and the International Criminal Court: An Overview
by Sarah B. Sewall, Carl Kaysen, and Michael P. Scharf
Part I: The Roots of the ICC
The Evolution of the ICC: From the Hague to Rome and Back Again
Leila Nadya Sadat
Lessons from the International Criminal Tribunals
Richard J. Goldstone and Gary Jonathan Bass
The Statute of the ICC: Past, Present, and Future
Bartram S. Brown
Exceptional Cases in Rome: The United States and the Struggle for an ICC
Lawrence Weschler
Part II: The United States and the ICC
The U.S. Perspective on the ICC
David J. Scheffer
The Constitution and the ICC
Ruth Wedgewood
American Servicemembers and the ICC
Robinson O. Everett
The ICC and the Deployment of U.S. Armed Forces
William S. Nash
The United States and the Genocide Law: A History of Ambivalence
Samantha Power
Part III: The ICC and National Approaches to Justice
Justice versus Peace
Michael P. Scharf
Complementarity and Conflict: States, Victims, and the ICC
Madeleine Morris
Part IV: The ICC's Jurisdiction Over the Nationals of Non-Party States
The ICC's Juridiction Over the Nationals of Non-Party States
Michael P. Scharf
The ICC and the Future of the Global Legal System
Abram Chayes and Anne-Marie Slaughter
Appendix: Bringing a Case to the ICC: Pathways and Thresholds
Bartram S. Brown