After interviewing Dr. Plesch, The Guardian published an article on the recovered “hidden history” of war crimes indictments produced by the UN war crimes commission (UNWCC).
To read the article, please click here.
After interviewing Dr. Plesch, The Guardian published an article on the recovered “hidden history” of war crimes indictments produced by the UN war crimes commission (UNWCC).
To read the article, please click here.
SAVE THE DATE
The United Nations Department of Public Information is hosting a panel discussion
“United Nations War Crimes Commission Records: Past, Present and Future”
Tuesday, 11 November 2014
1:15 p.m. – 2:45 p.m.
Conference Room 1, United Nations Headquarters, New York
Opening remarks:
H.E. Mr. Asoke Kumar MUKERJI, Permanent Representative of India to the United Nations
Panelists:
Mr. Adama DIENG, Special Adviser on the Prevention of Genocide
Mrs. Bridget SISK, Chief, United Nations Archives and Records Management Section
Mr. Patrick J. TREANOR, Former member of the Office of Special Investigations, the United States Department of Justice
Mr. Dan PLESCH, Director, The Centre for Diplomatic Studies and Diplomacy, SOAS, University of London
Mr. Radu IOANID, Director, The International Archival Program, Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
Moderator:
Ms. Edith LEDERER, United Nations Correspondent for AP
Working in partnership with the Grotius Centre of Leiden University and a team of leading legal practitioners and academics, the War Crimes Project is proud to announce the online release of the Special Symposium of the Criminal Law Forum focused on the UNWCC. With fourteen articles and a foreword by Justice Richard Goldstone, the Special Symposium highlights the work of the UNWCC and some of the national representatives to the Commission.
Visit Springer Online to see the contents and download the articles. Hard copies are also available from the publisher.
A five-year research project led by SOAS, University of London on a collection of World War II archives, held in secret for sixty years, has been published in a new paper which questions the assumption today that rape was not prosecuted as a war crime until after the post-Yugoslavia wars of the 1990s.
Greater access to the archives which documented thousands of cases against accused World War II criminals in Europe and Asia was the result of a campaign led by Dr Dan Plesch, Director of the SOAS Centre for International Studies and Diplomacy (CISD) and Assistant Director of Shanti Sattler, last year.
The findings, published in a paper in the Criminal Law Forum, the official journal of the International Society for the Reform of Criminal law, ‘The Relevance of the United National War Crimes Commission to the Prosecution of Sexual and Gender-Based crimes today’ co-authored by Dr Plesch, Susana SáCouto, Director of American University War Crimes Research Office and Chante Lasco, Jurisprudence Collections Coordinator, WCRO, highlight the importance of UNWCC-supported cases for the prosecution of SGBV cases before contemporary tribunals.
The research shows that:
The paper argues that the specific legal and political contribution of these cases “cannot be overestimated” since in the twenty first century rape has often been regarded as a less than serious crime – even an inevitable part of war.
Speaking about the findings, Justice Richard Goldstone, the former Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunals for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda, said: “Had the work of the UNWCC been taken into account by the drafters of the Security Council statutes for the ICTY and the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, the definitions of war crimes might well have been more explicit with regard to gender-related crimes. In any event, as the first Chief Prosecutor of the ICTY, I would have benefited immeasurable from access to this rich material.”
Dr Plesch added: “Among the files we found clear examples of international war criminals being prosecuted at national level with international support. These findings can boost the efforts of the UN, Foreign Secretary William Hague at the forthcoming Global Summit to End Sexual Violence in Conflict.”
The authors of ‘The Relevance of the United National War Crimes Commission to the Prosecution of Sexual and Gender-Based crimes today’’ say more research needs to be done on the national trial records and that the prosecutions that they have uncovered do not of course begin to address the vast amount of such crimes at the time.
The Global Summit to End Sexual Violence in Conflict – is due to take place in London on 10-12 June.
Access the full paper: The Relevance of the United National War Crimes Commission to the Prosecution of Sexual and Gender-Based crimes today.
Access Justice Richard Goldstone’s Foreword in Criminal Law Forum: United Nations War Crimes Commission Symposium.
Click here to listen to the audio recording of the event “Reinforcing Human Rights Standards: Uncovering Lessons from the United Nations War Crimes Commission of 1943 – 1948” that was held on April 28th at the Georgetown University Law Center in Washington DC and marked the launch of the Criminal Law Forum Special Symposium on the UNWCC. Justice Richard Goldstone chaired the event and discussed his foreword to Symposium. The following authors presented their article contributions:
War Crimes Project Director and Assistant Director Dan Plesch and Shanti Sattler presented a paper “Beyond Nuremberg: Considering the Work of the United Nations War Crimes Commission of 1943 – 1948” at the conference “Historical Origins of International Criminal Law” in Hong Kong in March 2014. The conference was hosted by the Forum for International Criminal and Humanitarian Law (FICHL) and the City University of Hong Kong.
Check out this link for more information: http://www.fichl.org/activities/the-historical-origins-of-international-criminal-law/
Kip Hale of the American Bar Association Center for Human Rights just wrote an excellent article about our work for the Huffington Post. Read it here!
The most recent article by the UNWCC project staff has just been published by the International Community Law Review.
Click here to get a copy!
This two day conference, chaired by Justice Richard Goldstone, will mark the 70th anniversary of a forgotten initiative in operation from 1943 to 1948 and evaluate the potential contribution of the Commission’s work to contemporary efforts for international criminal justice and human rights advocacy.
With a focus on the key issues discussed by the Commission and addressed by member nations through their national trials, the conference will examine themes including the prosecution of sexual violence, torture, crimes against humanity and collective responsibility. Justice Richard Goldstone will open the conference with a keynote address and confirmed speakers include internationally-respected human rights law expert William Schabas, and Mark Ellis, Director of the International Bar Association.
The conference is hosted by the Centre for International Studies and Diplomacy at SOAS and the International Bar Association, with the generous support of the Oak Foundation and the Carnegie Corporation of New York, and in cooperation with the Wiener Library, American University War Crimes Research Office, and the American Bar Association Center for Human Rights.
Click here to register!