My #ICC and #IRMCT summaries of decisions have been updated to include April 2026 decisions peterrobinson.com/digests/
My #ICC and #IRMCT summaries of decisions have been updated to include February 2026 decisions peterrobinson.com/digests/
My #ICC and #IRMCT summaries of decisions have been updated to include January 2026 decisions peterrobinson.com/digests/
This is a fascinating glimpse into a world us defence counsel have inhabited for the past decades. Kudos to @justiceinfo.bsky.social and Damien Scalia for bringing this to the wider community.
My #ICC and #IRMCT summaries of decisions have been updated to include November 2025 decisions #ASP24 peterrobinson.com/digests/
My #ICC and #IRMCT summaries of decisions have been updated to include December 2025 decisions peterrobinson.com/digests/
Thank you to Kate McInnes for calling attention to the plight of the #ICTR acquitted and released persons stranded in #Niger. My client, Francois-Xavier #Nzuwonemeye was arrested in 2000, acquitted in 2014, and has yet to be reunited with his family. This is not justice.
Peter Robinson
Peter Robinson
Peter Robinson
Peter Robinson
Peter Robinson
Peter Robinson
Peter Robinson
Peter Robinson
Peter Robinson
Peter Robinson
peterrobinson.com
Should we permit the foundations of international law to erode, the world would slip once more into anarchy and chaos.
#WarCriminals - In an innovative new book, Swiss researcher Damien Scalia presents findings from interviews with individuals mostly convicted and acquitted by the former UN tribunals for former Yugoslavia and Rwanda.
www.justiceinfo.net/en/154966-wh...
#InternationalJustice #criminals
Beyond Residual Functions: The IRMCT, the ‘Stateless Eight’, and the Human Rights Obligations of Security Council Subsidiaries | by Kate McInnes
Justice Info
EJIL: Talk!
www.ejiltalk.org
On 10 December 2025, the Security Council once again debated the future of the International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals (IRMCT). As in previous sessions, delegations diverged sharply in...
In an innovative new book, Swiss researcher Damien Scalia presents findings from interviews with individuals mostly convicted and acquitted by the former UN tribunals for former Yugoslavia and Rwanda.