Written by practicing criminal defense lawyers, jurists, investigators,
and specialized journalists, this book criticizes the whole initiative
of international criminal justice and considers the idea that it must be
abandoned in the name of justice. Has foreign policy trumped justice?
How are equity, equality before the law, absence of selectivity,
protection of witnesses, and enforcement affected? How are lives of
citizens throughout the world changed by International Justice? Asking
the burning questions about criminal justice as it is practiced at the
International Criminal Court, the ad-hoc tribunals for Rwanda, and the
former Yugoslavia, Sierra Leone, this account will appeal to those
interested in politics, law, and human rights.