“Commited by Men”: Individual Criminal Responsibility for Aggression Against Ukraine

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Standard

“Commited by Men”: Individual Criminal Responsibility for Aggression Against Ukraine. / Bogush, Gleb.

I: Polish Review of International and European Law, Bind 12, Nr. 02, 13.02.2024.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Bogush, G 2024, '“Commited by Men”: Individual Criminal Responsibility for Aggression Against Ukraine', Polish Review of International and European Law, bind 12, nr. 02. https://doi.org/10.21697/2023.12.2.04

APA

Bogush, G. (2024). “Commited by Men”: Individual Criminal Responsibility for Aggression Against Ukraine. Polish Review of International and European Law, 12(02). https://doi.org/10.21697/2023.12.2.04

Vancouver

Bogush G. “Commited by Men”: Individual Criminal Responsibility for Aggression Against Ukraine. Polish Review of International and European Law. 2024 feb. 13; 12(02). https://doi.org/10.21697/2023.12.2.04

Author

Bogush, Gleb. / “Commited by Men”: Individual Criminal Responsibility for Aggression Against Ukraine. I: Polish Review of International and European Law. 2024 ; Bind 12, Nr. 02.

Bibtex

@article{f9a3e9e608d64c80bcf59c5d5ee5ab9c,
title = "“Commited by Men”: Individual Criminal Responsibility for Aggression Against Ukraine",
abstract = "The article deals with the personal scope of criminal responsibility for the crime of aggression against Ukraine. While the Kampala amendments to the Statute of the International Criminal Court have further strengthened the crime of aggression{\textquoteright}s leadership character, they have also limited the possibility of holding individuals accountable as accomplices. Nonetheless, this article posits that there are still avenues within the current legal framework to bring key individuals involved in the aggression against Ukraine to justice. It examines different factions within the Russian leadership and the leaders of Belarus and also explores the possibility of bringing Russian propagandists to account. The article advocates for a careful selection policy that balances international and domestic systems better to serve the cause of accountability. Pursuing investigations and prosecutions against these groups should result in an outcome that re#ects the extent of the criminality of Russia{\textquoteright}s aggressive war.",
keywords = "Faculty of Law, crime of aggression, International criminal law, Russia, Ukraine, use of force",
author = "Gleb Bogush",
year = "2024",
month = feb,
day = "13",
doi = "https://doi.org/10.21697/2023.12.2.04",
language = "English",
volume = " 12",
journal = "Polish Review of International and European Law",
issn = "2299-2170",
number = "02",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - “Commited by Men”: Individual Criminal Responsibility for Aggression Against Ukraine

AU - Bogush, Gleb

PY - 2024/2/13

Y1 - 2024/2/13

N2 - The article deals with the personal scope of criminal responsibility for the crime of aggression against Ukraine. While the Kampala amendments to the Statute of the International Criminal Court have further strengthened the crime of aggression’s leadership character, they have also limited the possibility of holding individuals accountable as accomplices. Nonetheless, this article posits that there are still avenues within the current legal framework to bring key individuals involved in the aggression against Ukraine to justice. It examines different factions within the Russian leadership and the leaders of Belarus and also explores the possibility of bringing Russian propagandists to account. The article advocates for a careful selection policy that balances international and domestic systems better to serve the cause of accountability. Pursuing investigations and prosecutions against these groups should result in an outcome that re#ects the extent of the criminality of Russia’s aggressive war.

AB - The article deals with the personal scope of criminal responsibility for the crime of aggression against Ukraine. While the Kampala amendments to the Statute of the International Criminal Court have further strengthened the crime of aggression’s leadership character, they have also limited the possibility of holding individuals accountable as accomplices. Nonetheless, this article posits that there are still avenues within the current legal framework to bring key individuals involved in the aggression against Ukraine to justice. It examines different factions within the Russian leadership and the leaders of Belarus and also explores the possibility of bringing Russian propagandists to account. The article advocates for a careful selection policy that balances international and domestic systems better to serve the cause of accountability. Pursuing investigations and prosecutions against these groups should result in an outcome that re#ects the extent of the criminality of Russia’s aggressive war.

KW - Faculty of Law

KW - crime of aggression

KW - International criminal law

KW - Russia

KW - Ukraine

KW - use of force

U2 - https://doi.org/10.21697/2023.12.2.04

DO - https://doi.org/10.21697/2023.12.2.04

M3 - Journal article

VL - 12

JO - Polish Review of International and European Law

JF - Polish Review of International and European Law

SN - 2299-2170

IS - 02

ER -

ID: 383886498