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Prosecuting Serious Economic Crimes as International Crimes – A New Mandate for the ICC?

MPS-Authors

Roksandić Vidlička,  Sunčana
Guest Researcher, Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Criminal Law, Max Planck Society;

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Supplementary Material (public)

BC_2_Inhaltsverzeichnis.pdf
(Supplementary material), 297KB

Citation

Roksandić Vidlička, S. (2017). Prosecuting Serious Economic Crimes as International Crimes – A New Mandate for the ICC?. Berlin: Duncker & Humblot.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0002-572C-C
Abstract
Serious economic crimes and violations of economic, social and cultural rights have often been neglected in criminal proceedings and reports of truth commissions that have followed in the wake of economic transitions or conflicts. Although such economic crimes often result in a substantial loss of wealth to the overall economy and society of the country in question, they have not been widely nor effectively prosecuted. The Balkan region is no exception to this rule.

The study connects international criminal law with discourses of international human rights law, security studies, (supranational) criminology, political sciences, transitional justice and (economic) criminal law in order to find arguments as to why it is necessary to start prosecuting serious (transitional) economic offences as crimes under international law and why they should find their place in the ICC Statute. The research explains why Art. 7(1)(k) of the ICC Statute is the most plausible means to do so without violating the principle of legality.