Victims' Rights and Advocacy at the International Criminal Court

Author:   T. Markus Funk (Partner, Partner, Perkins Coie, Denver, CO)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
Edition:   2nd Revised edition
ISBN:  

9780199941469


Pages:   592
Publication Date:   30 April 2015
Format:   Hardback
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Victims' Rights and Advocacy at the International Criminal Court


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Author:   T. Markus Funk (Partner, Partner, Perkins Coie, Denver, CO)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
Imprint:   Oxford University Press Inc
Edition:   2nd Revised edition
Dimensions:   Width: 23.90cm , Height: 4.80cm , Length: 16.50cm
Weight:   0.896kg
ISBN:  

9780199941469


ISBN 10:   0199941467
Pages:   592
Publication Date:   30 April 2015
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

"Foreword by Paolina Massidda, Principal Counsel, Office of Public Counsel for Victims, International Criminal Court About the Author PART I. INTRODUCTION PART II. A Legacy of Abuse and Suffering Leads to the Birth of the ICC PART III. TRACING THE DEVELOPMENT OF VICTIMS' RIGHTS UNDER INTERNATIONAL LAW A. Victim-Centric Justice of the 1400's - Customary Law As Exemplified By the Code of Leke Dukagjini B. Centralized State Power in the 1700's and 1800's, the Scientification of Criminal Law, And the Decline of Victims' Rights Under Domestic Law C. Twentieth-Century Resurgence of Victims Rights Under Domestic Law D. Victims' Rights Recognized as Part of International Law PART IV. PRIMER ON THE ICC A. Breaking New Ground for Victims' Rights B. The ICC's Operation C. The ICC's Limited Subject-Matter Jurisdiction D. Territorial and Personal Jurisdiction E. The ICC's Limited Temporal Jurisdiction F. The ICC's Due Process Guarantees G. The ""Complementarity"" Firewall: Understanding the ICC's Key Admissibility Test H. Case Initiation I. A New Paradigm: The ICC's Hybrid System of Advocacy J. Reconciling the ICC's Sweeping Promises to Victims with the Realities on the Ground PART V. THE ROME STATUTE'S GROUNDBREAKING (AND EXPANSIVE) RECOGNITION OF VICTIMS' RIGHTS A. Victims' Rights Enshrined in the ICC's Rome Statute B. Summary of the ICC's Victim-Related Rules of Procedure and Evidence C. Select Victim-Rights Case Law D. Exploring the Role of Victims as ""Participants"" in ICC Proceedings E. Modality and Extent of Victim Participation Remain Unsettled PART VI. QUALIFYING AS LEGAL COUNSEL FOR VICTIMS A. Becoming a Formally-Recognized ICC ""Victim Representative"" B. An Alternative Mode of Legal Representation: ""Assistant to Counsel"" PART VII. STEPS TO FORMAL RECOGNITION AS A ""VICTIM"" A. The Long and Torturous Road to Formal Recognition as a ""Victim"" B. Distinguishing Victims from Witnesses PART VIII. Preparing for Complex Group Representation A. Promises and Potential Pitfalls of Group Representation - The Class Action Model B. The Victim Representative's Duty of Loyalty to Clients PART IX. UNDERSTANDING VICTIMS' INTERESTS AND RECOGNIZING THE IMPORTANCE OF MANAGING AND GUIDING EXPECTATIONS A. Promises Collide With Reality B. Managing Expectations C. Ensuring Victims' Safety PART X. HOLDING A PRE-TRIAL EVIDENTIARY HEARING TO ESTABLISH THE HISTORIC RECORD A. Litigation Aimed At Creating Present and Future Individual (and Group) Accountability B. Convening a Pretrial Evidentiary Hearing to Develop the Common Factual Backdrop of the Case PART XI. COMPILING A ""VICTIMIZATION DOSSIER"" AS A PERMANENT HISTORIC RECORD OF ABUSE A. The Carefully-Tailored Dossier as a Useful Tool for Victim Representatives B. Devising Standard Procedures for Compiling Evidence C. Developing Interview Protocols D. Submitting the Dossier to the Court E. Submitting the Dossier to the Office of the Prosecutor PART XII. PRE-TRIAL PROCEEDINGS A. Functions of the Pre-Trial Chamber B. The Office of Public Council for the Defense C. Victim Participation in Pre-Trial Investigative Activities D. Pre-Trial Preparation with a Clear Focus on the Main Trial E. Some Observations On Pre-Trial Meetings with Witnesses F. Self-Representation and the Corresponding Threat to the Historic Record G. The Benefits of Guilty Pleas PART XIII. THE MAIN TRIAL A. Opening Statement B. Direct Examination of Witnesses C. Introducing Exhibits D. Cross-Examination E. Re-Direct Examination PART XIV. SUMMATION AND SENTENCING A. Summation: Capturing the Whole Story B. Sentencing: Imposition of Justice PART XV. CONCLUSION Appendix I. Selected Articles from Rome Statute Appendix II. Selected Rules of Procedure and Evidence Appendix III. Regulations of the Registry Appendix IV. Selected Regulations of the Court Appendix V. Code of Professional Conduct for Counsel Appendix VI. Counsel Participation Form Appendix VII. Request for Participation in Proceedings and Reparations at the ICC for Individual Victims Appendix VIII. Helping Victims Make Their Voice Heard Appendix IX. Representing Victims before the International Criminal Court: A Manual for Legal Representatives Table of Authorities ICC Legal Provisions Index"

Reviews

Markus Funk has written the 'must-read' book for all lawyers and judges who practice in the International Criminal Court and for the entire academy of international criminal lawyers. The practice and jurisprudence of victims' rights have grown so rapidly that Mr. Funk's book is an essential tool in the courtroom. Victims' Rights and Advocacy at the International Criminal Court meets the critical need for a detailed and comprehensive guidebook for the representation of victims. International justice is well-served by this path-breaking book. - Ambassador David Scheffer, U.S. Ambassador-at-Large for War Crimes Issues (1997-2001); Leader of the U.S. Negotiating Team in United Nations talks on the International Criminal Court; Director, Northwestern University's Center for International Human Rights. This intelligent book discusses a topical issue with vivacity. It puts forward a number of thoughtful and constructive proposals for ameliorating the victims' rights in the international criminal system. - Judge Antonio Cassese, First President of the United Nations International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia; Chairman of the UN International Commission of Inquiry on Darfur; Current President, UN Special Tribunal for Lebanon; Professor of International Law, University of Florence. Victims' Rights and Advocacy at the International Criminal Court is the first in-depth treatment of the most contemporary topics in international criminal justice, namely, the International Criminal Court and victims' participation in international criminal proceedings. Mr. Funk's insightful and first-of-its-kind book is perfectly-timed to provide critical guidance to practitioners and academics alike. In so doing, the book effectively challenges some of the preconceptions observers have had about the roles played by victims and their representatives. - Professor M. Cherif Bassiouni, 1998 Chairperson of the Drafting Committee of the U.N.'s Diplomatic Conference on the Establishment of the ICC; President, DePaul University International Human Rights Law Institute. Victims' Rights and Advocacy at the International Criminal Court combines a keen historical appreciation of the victims' rights movement with a detailed practical knowledge of how victims' representatives can most effectively serve their clients, the court, and the general cause of justice. This volume is indispensable for those wishing to understand how the court has integrated victims into their processes and the directions in which the role of victims in these processes is likely to develop. - Judge Morris S. Arnold, United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit; former university vice president and professor at the University of Pennsylvania Law School; former Dean of the University of Indiana School of Law. Mr. Funk's book provides a perfectly candid, and at times quite disheartening, assessment of the ICC's shortcomings, while also acknowledging its strengths. Providing a roadmap to reform and the establishment of a more 'professionalized' Court, Mr. Funk's book succeeds entirely in its bold effort to marry the theory of victims' rights with the practice of victim representation. - Justice Enver Hasani, President of the Kosovo Constitutional Court. [Mr. Funk's book] is a very meticulous, detailed, and methodical handbook for the victims' representatives. Mr. Funk establishes the basis for a thorough and meticulous vade-mecum that every victim representative at the ICC will want to have within easy reach. - Prof. Pierre-Michel Fontaine, Former Chief of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees' Promotion of Refugee Law Section. As T. Markus Funk in this groundbreaking book illustrates so compellingly, the broad crimes punishable by international criminal law generate a disturbing number of real flesh-and-blood victims... This book in the end leads to a dramatically-improved comprehension of victims' rights by significantly advancing the debate on victims' participation within the framework of the Rome Statute, and by enhancing our shared understanding of how to most effectively and responsively address victims' needs, as well as their interest in participating in the proceedings. - Paolina Massidda, Principal Counsel of the International Criminal Court's Office of Public Counsel for Victims [B]ecause of its clearness, pragmatism and facile structure, it is easy to imagine Funk's book becoming very soon a 'must-have' on the desks of practitioners working on victims' participation and victims' rights at the international level. -Valentina Spiga, Book Review, Oxford Journal of International Criminal Justice Funk's primer on how best to represent victims is seasoned with ICC case law and meaningful insights that all ICC victim advocates need to know in order to be effective...T. Markus Funk's Victims' Rights and Advocacy at the International Criminal Court is a valuable read and resource for those who care about international justice. - Prof. Juliet Sorensen, Book Review, Journal of Criminal Law & Criminology (2010).


Markus Funk has written the 'must-read' book for all lawyers and judges who practice in the International Criminal Court and for the entire academy of international criminal lawyers. The practice and jurisprudence of victims' rights have grown so rapidly that Mr. Funk's book is an essential tool in the courtroom. Victims' Rights and Advocacy at the International Criminal Court meets the critical need for a detailed and comprehensive guidebook for the representation of victims. International justice is well-served by this path-breaking book. - Ambassador David Scheffer, U.S. Ambassador-at-Large for War Crimes Issues (1997-2001); Leader of the U.S. Negotiating Team in United Nations talks on the International Criminal Court; Director, Northwestern University's Center for International Human Rights. This intelligent book discusses a topical issue with vivacity. It puts forward a number of thoughtful and constructive proposals for ameliorating the victims' rights in the international criminal system. - Judge Antonio Cassese, First President of the United Nations International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia; Chairman of the UN International Commission of Inquiry on Darfur; Current President, UN Special Tribunal for Lebanon; Professor of International Law, University of Florence. Victims' Rights and Advocacy at the International Criminal Court is the first in-depth treatment of the most contemporary topics in international criminal justice, namely, the International Criminal Court and victims' participation in international criminal proceedings. Mr. Funk's insightful and first-of-its-kind book is perfectly-timed to provide critical guidance to practitioners and academics alike. In so doing, the book effectively challenges some of the preconceptions observers have had about the roles played by victims and their representatives. - Professor M. Cherif Bassiouni, 1998 Chairperson of the Drafting Committee of the U.N.'s Diplomatic Conference on the Establishment of the ICC; President, DePaul University International Human Rights Law Institute. Victims' Rights and Advocacy at the International Criminal Court combines a keen historical appreciation of the victims' rights movement with a detailed practical knowledge of how victims' representatives can most effectively serve their clients, the court, and the general cause of justice. This volume is indispensable for those wishing to understand how the court has integrated victims into their processes and the directions in which the role of victims in these processes is likely to develop. - Judge Morris S. Arnold, United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit; former university vice president and professor at the University of Pennsylvania Law School; former Dean of the University of Indiana School of Law. Mr. Funk's book provides a perfectly candid, and at times quite disheartening, assessment of the ICC's shortcomings, while also acknowledging its strengths. Providing a roadmap to reform and the establishment of a more 'professionalized' Court, Mr. Funk's book succeeds entirely in its bold effort to marry the theory of victims' rights with the practice of victim representation. - Justice Enver Hasani, President of the Kosovo Constitutional Court. [Mr. Funk's book] is a very meticulous, detailed, and methodical handbook for the victims' representatives. Mr. Funk establishes the basis for a thorough and meticulous vade-mecum that every victim representative at the ICC will want to have within easy reach. - Prof. Pierre-Michel Fontaine, Former Chief of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees' Promotion of Refugee Law Section. As T. Markus Funk in this groundbreaking book illustrates so compellingly, the broad crimes punishable by international criminal law generate a disturbing number of real flesh-and-blood victims. . . . This book in the end leads to a dramatically-improved comprehension of victims' rights by significantly advancing the debate on victims' participation within the framework of the Rome Statute, and by enhancing our shared understanding of how to most effectively and responsively address victims' needs, as well as their interest in participating in the proceedings. - Paolina Massidda, Principal Counsel of the International Criminal Court's Office of Public Counsel for Victims [B]ecause of its clearness, pragmatism and facile structure, it is easy to imagine Funk's book becoming very soon a 'must-have' on the desks of practitioners working on victims' participation and victims' rights at the international level. -Valentina Spiga, Book Review, Oxford Journal of International Criminal Justice Funk's primer on how best to represent victims is seasoned with ICC case law and meaningful insights that all ICC victim advocates need to know in order to be effective...T. Markus Funk's Victims' Rights and Advocacy at the International Criminal Court is a valuable read and resource for those who care about international justice. - Prof. Juliet Sorensen, Book Review, Journal of Criminal Law & Criminology (2010).


Funk's primer on how best to represent victims is seasoned with ICC case law and meaningful insights that all ICC victim advocates need to know in order to be effective...T. Markus Funk's Victims' Rights and Advocacy at the International Criminal Court is a valuable read and resource for those who care about international justice. - Prof. Juliet Sorensen, Book Review, Journal of Criminal Law & Criminology (2010). [B]ecause of its clearness, pragmatism and facile structure, it is easy to imagine Funk's book becoming very soon a 'must-have' on the desks of practitioners working on victims' participation and victims' rights at the international level. -Valentina Spiga, Book Review, Oxford Journal of International Criminal Justice As T. Markus Funk in this groundbreaking book illustrates so compellingly, the broad crimes punishable by international criminal law generate a disturbing number of real flesh-and-blood victims. . . . This book in the end leads to a dramatically-improved comprehension of victims' rights by significantly advancing the debate on victims' participation within the framework of the Rome Statute, and by enhancing our shared understanding of how to most effectively and responsively address victims' needs, as well as their interest in participating in the proceedings. - Paolina Massidda, Principal Counsel of the International Criminal Court's Office of Public Counsel for Victims [Mr. Funk's book] is a very meticulous, detailed, and methodical handbook for the victims' representatives. Mr. Funk establishes the basis for a thorough and meticulous vade-mecum that every victim representative at the ICC will want to have within easy reach. - Prof. Pierre-Michel Fontaine, Former Chief of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees' Promotion of Refugee Law Section. Mr. Funk's book provides a perfectly candid, and at times quite disheartening, assessment of the ICC's shortcomings, while also acknowledging its strengths. Providing a roadmap to reform and the establishment of a more 'professionalized' Court, Mr. Funk's book succeeds entirely in its bold effort to marry the theory of victims' rights with the practice of victim representation. - Justice Enver Hasani, President of the Kosovo Constitutional Court. Victims' Rights and Advocacy at the International Criminal Court combines a keen historical appreciation of the victims' rights movement with a detailed practical knowledge of how victims' representatives can most effectively serve their clients, the court, and the general cause of justice. This volume is indispensable for those wishing to understand how the court has integrated victims into their processes and the directions in which the role of victims in these processes is likely to develop. - Judge Morris S. Arnold, United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit; former university vice president and professor at the University of Pennsylvania Law School; former Dean of the University of Indiana School of Law. Victims' Rights and Advocacy at the International Criminal Court is the first in-depth treatment of the most contemporary topics in international criminal justice, namely, the International Criminal Court and victims' participation in international criminal proceedings. Mr. Funk's insightful and first-of-its-kind book is perfectly-timed to provide critical guidance to practitioners and academics alike. In so doing, the book effectively challenges some of the preconceptions observers have had about the roles played by victims and their representatives. - Professor M. Cherif Bassiouni, 1998 Chairperson of the Drafting Committee of the U.N.'s Diplomatic Conference on the Establishment of the ICC; President, DePaul University International Human Rights Law Institute. This intelligent book discusses a topical issue with vivacity. It puts forward a number of thoughtful and constructive proposals for ameliorating the victims' rights in the international criminal system. - Judge Antonio Cassese, First President of the United Nations International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia; Chairman of the UN International Commission of Inquiry on Darfur; Current President, UN Special Tribunal for Lebanon; Professor of International Law, University of Florence. Markus Funk has written the 'must-read' book for all lawyers and judges who practice in the International Criminal Court and for the entire academy of international criminal lawyers. The practice and jurisprudence of victims' rights have grown so rapidly that Mr. Funk's book is an essential tool in the courtroom. Victims' Rights and Advocacy at the International Criminal Court meets the critical need for a detailed and comprehensive guidebook for the representation of victims. International justice is well-served by this path-breaking book. - Ambassador David Scheffer, U.S. Ambassador-at-Large for War Crimes Issues (1997-2001); Leader of the U.S. Negotiating Team in United Nations talks on the International Criminal Court; Director, Northwestern University's Center for International Human Rights.


Author Information

T. Markus Funk, now in private practice, served as a decorated Chicago federal prosecutor, Section Chief with the U.S. State Department-Balkans, clerk with the federal court of appeals and district court, and law professor at institutions including the University of Chicago, Oxford University, Northwestern University, and the US Department of Justice's National Advocacy Center. He trained and advised international war crimes judges, defense attorneys, victim advocates, investigators, and prosecutors in the Balkans and elsewhere. T. Markus Funk has the distinction of being the only person to have received both the Department of Justice's Attorney General's Award and the State Department's Superior Honor Award.

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