PART Ⅱ DISSENTING JUDGMENTS 5
Nuremberg 5
11 David Luban (1987), ‘The Legacies of Nuremberg’, Social Research, 54,pp. 779-829. 5
12 Edward M. Morgan (1988), ‘Retributory Theater’, American University Journal of International Law and Policy, 3, pp. 1-64. 57
13 Lawrence Douglas (1996), ‘The Memory of Judgment: The Law, the Holocaust, and Denial’, History and Memory , 7, pp. 100-120. 121
Tokyo and Manila 145
14 Elizabeth S. Kopelman (1991), ‘Ideology and International Law: The Dissent of the Indian Justice at the Tokyo War Crimes Trial’, International Law and Politics, 23, pp. 373-441. 145
15 Ann Marie Prevost (1992), ‘Race and War Crimes: The 1945 War Crimes Trial of General Tomoyuki Yamashita’, Human Rights Quarterly, 14, pp. 303-38. 215
Jerusalem 253
16 Georg Schwarzenberger (1962), ‘The Eichmann Judgment: An Essay in Censorial Jurisprudence’, Current Legal Problems, 15, pp. 248-65. 253
17 Shoshana Felman (2001), ‘Theaters of Justice: Arendt in Jerusalem, the Eichmann Trial, and the Redefinition of Legal Meaning in the Wake of the Holocaust’, Critical Inquiry, 27, pp. 201-38. 271
Baghdad 311
18 Roger Normand and Chris af Jochnick (1994), ‘The Legitimation of Violence: A Critical Analysis of the Gulf War’, Harvard International Law Journal, 35, pp. 387-416. 311
The Hague and Arusha 343
19 Alfred P. Rubin (1994), ‘An International Criminal Tribunal for Former Yugoslavia?’, Pace International Law Review, 6, pp. 7-17. 343
20 Makau Mutua (1997), ‘Never Again: Questioning the Yugoslav and Rwanda Tribunals’, Temple International and Comparative Law Journal, 11, pp. 167-87. 355
21 Anonymous (1996), ‘Human Rights in Peace Negotiations’, Human Rights Quarterly, 18, pp. 249-58. 377
22 Martti Koskenniemi (2002), ‘Between Impunity and Show Trials’, Max Planck Yearbook of United Nations Law, 6, pp. 1-35. 387
Rome 425
23 Frederic Megret (2001), ‘Three Dangers for the International Criminal Court: A Critical Look at a Consensual Project’, Finnish Yearbook of International Law, 12, pp. 193-247. 425
Name Index 481