As the first analysis of the archives of international courts, examining how these archives produce particular understandings of what the 'international community' is, the book is essential reading for IR and ILAW scholars and archival scientists, as well as historians interested in the relationship between history, memory and law.
As the first analysis of the archives of international courts, examining how these archives produce particular understandings of what the 'international community' is, the book is essential reading for IR and ILAW scholars and archival scientists, as well as historians interested in the relationship between history, memory and law.
Henry Redwood is Lecturer in International Relations at London South Bank University. He is co-editor of Reconciliation (2021), co-author of Impact and International Affairs (2021), and has published withs Review of International Studies (2019), Millennium (2020) and Critical Studies on Security (2021).
Inhaltsangabe
1. The politics of archival knowledge in international courts 2. The international criminal tribunal for Rwanda and its archive 3: The force of law 4. Contesting the archive 5. Reconstituting justice 6. Imagining community 7. The residual mechanism and the archive.
1. The politics of archival knowledge in international courts 2. The international criminal tribunal for Rwanda and its archive 3: The force of law 4. Contesting the archive 5. Reconstituting justice 6. Imagining community 7. The residual mechanism and the archive.
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