President and Secretary of State Characterize Events in Darfur as Genocide
@article{Crook2005PresidentAS, title={President and Secretary of State Characterize Events in Darfur as Genocide}, author={John R. Crook}, journal={American Journal of International Law}, year={2005}, volume={99}, pages={266 - 267} }
6 Citations
Complementarity in the Line of Fire: The Catalysing Effect of the International Criminal Court in Uganda and Sudan
- History
- 2013
Prologue: in the line of fire 1. Introduction: complementarity from the line of fire 2. The Rome Statute: complementarity in its legal context 3. Uganda: compromising complementarity 4. Sudan:…
Death And Disengagement: A Critical Analysis Of The International Community's Intervention Effort In Darfur
- Political Science
- 2010
Congress and Foreign Policy: Congressional Action on the Darfur Genocide
- Political SciencePS: Political Science & Politics
- 2009
ABSTRACT As of January 2008, more than 400,000 people have been killed and more than 2.5 million people have been displaced in the regions of Darfur and Chad. This event has not gone unnoticed in the…
Sudan: What Implications for President Al-Bashir’s Indictment by the ICC?
- Political Science
- 2008
• The conflict involving the government of Sudan and insurgents in Darfur stems mainly from the erosion of traditional mechanisms of peaceful settlement of disputes; the inadequacy of the alternative…
Darfur: the politics of genocide denial syndrome
- Political Science
- 2007
On April 7, 2004, United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan in marking the tenth anniversary of the Rwandan genocide addressed the UN Commission on Human Rights and unveiled a plan to halt the…