In Autonomy and Cooperation, noted legal scholar Dimitris Liakpolous
explores the content of powers attributed by the Statute of Rome to
United Nations Security Council. It begins by investigating the power to
activate the investigations of the prosecutor before examining the power
to suspend judicial activity. The book then defines the characteristics
of Security Council intervention in the context of cooperation and
judicial assistance and examines prerogatives regarding the crime of
aggression. The study concludes with an appreciation of the effect of
Security Council action on the jurisdictional activity of the
International Criminal Court. Final considerations aim to examine the
relevance of the possible coordination models of the action of the two
bodies, proposed during this introduction, in defining the forms that
the interactions between the two bodies.