000 | 03553nam a2200253Ia 4500 | ||
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020 | _a9781009166461 paperback | ||
040 | _csokunthea | ||
041 | _heng | ||
082 | _a341.69 | ||
100 | _aSperfeldt, Christoph, | ||
245 | 0 |
_aPractices of reparations in international criminal justice / _cChristoph Sperfeldt |
|
250 | _aFirst edition | ||
260 |
_bCambridge, United Kingdom : _aCambridge University Press , _c2023 |
||
300 |
_axiv, 366 pages : _b [ 9 p. ] ; _c24 cm. |
||
504 | _aIncludes bibliographical references [p.311-354] and index | ||
505 | _aPunishment and redress in international criminal justice -- Negotiating -- Targeting, participating, and representing -- Communicating and consulting -- Assisting -- Adjudicating at the ICC -- Adjudicating at the ECCC -- Projectifying -- Receiving and contesting | ||
520 | _a""What are 'reparations'?", asks Yang Oun when a local Cambodian NGO worker tries to inform him about the reparations mandate of the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC), a criminal tribunal set up by the Cambodian government and the United Nations in the capital Phnom Penh. Yang Oun belongs to Cambodia's ethnic Vietnamese minority and resides in one of the many picturesque but poor floating villages on the Tonle Sap Lake, roughly two and half hours drive - and another hour boat ride - north of Phnom Penh. During its reign 40 years ago, the Khmer Rouge persecuted him and his community. Yang Oun lost many family members and only survived the atrocities because he fled to Vietnam. Years later he decided to participate in the trials "to tell everyone about our suffering". Reparations were initially not on his mind, but is a field in the form that he is required to fill in for his application. My Cambodian colleague patiently assists him, as Yang Oun has never learned the Khmer script. I accompany this local NGO's field mission in my capacity as an Advisor of the German development cooperation (GIZ) to Cambodia's largest human rights NGO coalition"$cProvided by publisher Summary notes: ""What are 'reparations'?", asks Yang Oun when a local Cambodian NGO worker tries to inform him about the reparations mandate of the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC), a criminal tribunal set up by the Cambodian government and the United Nations in the capital Phnom Penh. Yang Oun belongs to Cambodia's ethnic Vietnamese minority and resides in one of the many picturesque but poor floating villages on the Tonle Sap Lake, roughly two and half hours drive - and another hour boat ride - north of Phnom Penh. During its reign 40 years ago, the Khmer Rouge persecuted him and his community. Yang Oun lost many family members and only survived the atrocities because he fled to Vietnam. Years later he decided to participate in the trials "to tell everyone about our suffering". Reparations were initially not on his mind, but is a field in the form that he is required to fill in for his application. My Cambodian colleague patiently assists him, as Yang Oun has never learned the Khmer script. I accompany this local NGO's field mission in my capacity as an Advisor of the German development cooperation (GIZ) to Cambodia's largest human rights NGO coalition" Provided by publisher. | ||
610 | _aExtraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia | ||
610 | _aInternational Criminal Court | ||
650 |
_aReparation (Criminal justice _zCambodia. |
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650 |
_aWar crime trials _zCambodia. |
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651 |
_aCambodia _xHistory _xAtrocities. _y1975-1979 |
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942 | _cBE | ||
999 |
_c2081 _d2081 |