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Distant Justice

Distant Justice

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Phil Clark
Cambridge University Press, 11/22/2018
EAN 9781108463379, ISBN10: 1108463371

Paperback, 390 pages, 22.8 x 15.2 x 2 cm
Language: English

There are a number of controversies surrounding the International Criminal Court (ICC) in Africa. Critics have charged it with neo-colonial meddling in African affairs, accusing it of undermining national sovereignty and domestic attempts to resolve armed conflict. Here, based on 650 interviews over 11 years, Phil Clark critically assesses the politics of the ICC in Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo, focusing particularly on the Court's multi-level impact on national politics and the lives of everyday citizens. He explores the ICC's effects on peace negotiations, national elections, domestic judicial reform, amnesty processes, combatant demobilisation and community-level accountability and reconciliation. In attempting to distance itself from African conflict zones geographically, philosophically and procedurally, Clark also reveals that the ICC has become more politicised and damaging to African polities, requiring a substantial rethink of the approaches and ideas that underpin the ICC's practice of distant justice.

1. Introduction
the warlord in the forecourt
2. Court between two poles
conceptualising 'complementarity' and 'distance'
3. Who pulls the strings? The ICC's relations with states
4. In whose name? The ICC's relations with affected communities
5. When courts collide
the ICC and domestic prosecutions
6. Peace versus justice Redux
the ICC, amnesties and peace negotiations
7. The ICC and community-based responses to atrocity
8. Continental patterns
assessing the ICC's impact in the remaining African situations
9. Conclusion
narrowing the distance.