Visions of Justice.
Liber Amicorum Mirjan Damaska., Beiträge zum Internationalen und Europäischen Strafrecht - Studies in International and European Criminal Law and Procedure 26
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Beschreibung
This book is a collection of essays presented at the international conference The Administration of Justice - Past Experience and Challenges for the Future, held in May 2015 in Cavtat, Croatia in honour of Mirjan Damaska, Sterling Professor of Law at Yale Law School. The conference was co-organized by the University of Zagreb Faculty of Law, Professor Damaska's first academic home and the Marija and Mirjan Damaska Foundation, established by him and his wife as expression of their affection towards their Alma Mater and Croatia. Twenty-six contributors - leading scholars in common law, civil law and the Far Eastern traditions - re-examine from different angles in an original, profound and insightful way all three key areas of his seminal and path-breaking monumental scholarship. The papers cover comparative and foreign procedure, the law of evidence and international criminal law, revealing the depth, richness and far-reaching nature of Damaska's opus. The conclusion is unanimous. In spite of decades that have passed the ideas and insights expressed in Damaska's scholarship did not lose their freshness and originality, moreover their influence continues today. Visions of Justice is an excellent piece of scholarship in its own right which will be of interest to criminal and evidence lawyers, as well as those with more general comparative interests.
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Leseprobe
Leseprobe 1
Inhalt
Hrvoje Sikirić Introduction Bruce Ackerman My Debt to Mirjan Damaška Kai Ambos The International Criminal Justice System and Prosecutorial Selection Policy Ennio Amodio Rethinking Evidence under Damaška's Teaching Teresa Armenta-Deu Beyond Accusatorial or Inquisitorial Systems: A Matter of Deliberation and Balance Károly Bárd Can the Jury Survive after the Judgment of the European Court of Human Rights in Taxquet v. Belgium? Steven G. Calabresi The Comparative Constitutional Law Scholarship of Professor Mirjan Damaška: A Tribute Oscar G. Chase »Supreme« Courts and the Imagination of the Real: An Essay in Honor of Mirjan Damaška Davor Derenčinović and Steven W. Becker The Serbian War Crimes Act and Quasi-universal Jurisdiction – Reflections on an Unprecedented Jurisdictional Experiment Zlata Ðurđević Legal and Political Limitations of the ICC Enforcement System: Blurring the Distinctive Features of the Criminal Court Izhak Englard The Faces of Justice and State Authority: A Review of the Reviews Albin Eser Changing Structures: From the ICTY to the ICC John D. Jackson Re-visiting ›Evidentiary Barriers to Conviction and Models of Criminal Procedure‹ after Forty Years Heike Jung Rituals and Procedure Máximo Langer In the Beginning was Fortescue: On the Intellectual Origins of the Adversarial and Inquisitorial Systems and Common and Civil Law in Comparative Criminal Procedure Mitchel de S.-O.-l'E. Lasser On the Comparative Autonomy of Forms and Ideas James G. Stewart The Strangely Familiar History of the Unitary Theory of Perpetration Katja Šugman Stubbs An Increasingly Blurred Division between Criminal and Administrative Law Michele Taruffo Globalizing Procedural Justice – Some General Remarks Stephen C. Thaman Reanchoring Evidence Law to Formal Rules: A Step toward Protecting the Innocent from Conviction for Capital Crimes? Ksenija Turković and Krešimir Kamber One Face of Human Rights for Two Faces of Criminal Justice: A European Perspective Zuo Weimin and Fu Xin Legal Transplant in the Criminal Procedure Law of China: Experiences and Reflections Harmen van der Wilt The Continuing Story of the International Criminal Court and Personal Immunities