The Russian-Ukrainian Conflict and War Crimes : Challenges for Documentation and International Prosecution
Contributor(s): Resource type: Ressourcentyp: Buch (Online)Book (Online)Language: English Series: Contemporary Security StudiesPublisher: Oxford : Taylor & Francis Group, 2024Description: 1 Online-Ressource (353 p.)ISBN:- 9781040152003
- Aggression (International law)
- Crimes against humanity (International law)
- Prosecution (International law)
- Russian Invasion of Ukraine, 2022
- Security, International
- Transitional justice
- War crimes (International law)
- War crimes-Ukraine
- War crimes investigation
- Agression (Droit international)
- Crimes contre l'humanité (Droit international)
- Poursuites judiciaires (Droit international)
- Justice transitionnelle
- Crimes de guerre (Droit international)
- Crimes de guerre - Enquêtes
- 341.6/9
- KZ7145 .R877 2025
Contents:
Summary: This book offers a multidisciplinary examination of the international crimes committed in the Russia-Ukraine War, and the challenges of their prosecution and documentationPPN: PPN: 1922675091Package identifier: Produktsigel: ZDB-94-OAB
Cover -- Half Title -- Series Information -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- List of Illustrations -- List of Contributors -- Introduction: The Rocky Road to Justice -- Efforts to Document and Prosecute Crimes in Ukraine From a Historical and Legal Perspective -- Between Impunity and Selective Justice -- Ukrainian Lawfare -- Justice for All Crimes Despite the Fog of Disinformation -- Presentation of the Volume -- Notes -- Part I The Soviet Legacy and Ruskii Mir
1 War Crimes in Russia's Invasion of Ukraine: The Soviet Legacy and the Wellsprings of Moscow's Disregard of International Humanitarian Law -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 The Soviet Legacy -- 1.3 Soviet Military Interventions Abroad: the Geneva Conventions in Practice -- 1.4 Security Policing in the USSR: a Role for the Geneva Conventions? -- 1.6 Russia's Wars in Chechnya -- 1.7 IHL and Russia's Incursions Into Neighboring Countries in the 1990s -- 1.8 IHL and Putin's External Wars -- 1.9 Conclusions -- Acknowledgments -- Notes
2 Historical Soviet and Contemporary Russian Criminal Acts Against Ukrainians Under the UN Genocide Convention of 1948: A Comparative Analysis -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 From Homo Sovieticus to Russkiy Mir -- Crimes of the Soviet Union and Their Rehabilitation in the Russian Federation -- 2.3 The Peculiar Relation Between the Kremlin and the Crime of Genocide -- 2.4 Contemporary Russian Crimes in Ukraine in the Light of the 1948 UN Convention On Genocide -- 2.5 Conclusion -- Notes -- 3 The Crime of Genocide: Historical Aspects, Political Discussions and Memory Laws in Ukraine -- 3.1 Introduction
3.2 Lemkin, Genocide, and Ukrainian Context -- 3.3 The Crime of Genocide in Ukrainian Law After Independence -- 3.4 New Lawmaking and Debates Around Genocide After 2014 -- 3.5 Shifting the Focus After 24 February 2022 -- 3.6 Conclusion -- Notes -- 4 In the Span of a Hybrid War: Engaging Post-Truth in Shadowing Russian War Crimes -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 Antagonistic Interrelation Between Post-Truth and Law -- 4.3 Russian War Crimes in Ukraine in Shadow of Post-Truth Narratives -- 4.4 Post-Truth as a Hybrid War Tactic -- 4.5 Conclusion -- Notes
5 A Nuremberg for Communism?: Unified Germany, International Law, and the Idea of a Tribunal for Stalinist/Soviet Crimes -- 5.1 "Putin's War" and Counterfactual History -- 5.2 Postcolonial, Cold War, and Cosmopolitan: the Three Varieties of (West) Germany's Policies of International Criminal Justice -- 5.3 Dealing With the Communist Past: a Continuation of West Germany's Sonderweg With State Criminality? -- 5.4 Conclusion -- Notes -- 6 Putin's Youth and the TikTok War: Creating the Militarized Self in Russian Adolescents -- 6.1 Historical and Political Context -- 6.2 Methodology -- 6.3 Results
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