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The Institutionalization of the International Criminal Court

Salla Huikuri

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Springer International Publishing img Link Publisher

Sozialwissenschaften, Recht, Wirtschaft / Politik und Wirtschaft

Beschreibung

This book explores the institution of the International Criminal Court (ICC) as a policy instrument. It argues that after the Cold War the European Union started challenging the unilateral policies of the United States by promoting new norms and institutions, such as the ICC. This development flies in the face of traditional explanations for cooperation, which would theorize institutionalization as the result of hegemonic preponderance, rational calculations or common identities. The book explains the dynamics behind the emergence of the ICC with a novel theoretical concept of normative binding. Normative binding is a strategy that provides middle powers with the means to tie down the unilateral policies of powerful actors that prefer not to cooperate. The idea is to promote new multilateral norms and deposit them in institutions, which have the potential to become binding even on unilateralist actors, if the majority of states adhere to them.

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Schlagwörter

Nuremberg trials, Us and the ICC, Obama effect, support for the ICC, Genocide Convention, legality, Germany and the ICC, multilateralism, legitimacy, unilateralism, normative binding, international criminal law, institutionalization, rational choice, case study approach, process tracing, universal jurisdiction, jurisdiction, Like-Minded Coalition, norms