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Not Nuremberg — Histories of Alternative Criminalization Paradigms, 1945–2021: An Introduction

Mark, James; Clark, Phil

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Authors

James Mark



Abstract

The Western myth of Nuremberg has dominated understandings of the evolution of international criminal law. Enshrining the International Military Tribunal as a critical point of origin, this paradigm has developed a narrative of post-war liberal progress, in which a universal model of externally-delivered, individualised criminal justice was interrupted by the exigencies of the Cold War then rediscovered through various international and hybrid tribunals in the 1990s and early 2000s, culminating in the creation of the International Criminal Court in 2002. Often instrumentalised to protect Western interests, the Nuremberg myth marginalises the histories of a wide range of criminalisation and accountability practices that existed, both at the time and since. In this essay, we introduce alternative practices and alliances that challenged both the Nuremberg myth and the specific accountability model it propagates: from the United Nations War Crimes Commission, which contested the colonial erasures of Nuremberg at the time, to the move towards localised forms of post-atrocity justice such as the gacaca courts in Rwanda in the 2000s. The essays in this dossier question the idea that international criminal law hibernated for four decades after Nuremberg and demonstrate how ideas of criminalisation have been shaped by numerous shifting mid- to -late twentieth and early twenty-first century ideologies, such as anti-colonialism, Communism, various iterations of human rights, racial justice, neoliberalism, or, more recently, populist re-imaginings of the global.

Citation

Mark, J., & Clark, P. (in press). Not Nuremberg — Histories of Alternative Criminalization Paradigms, 1945–2021: An Introduction. Humanity: An International Journal of Human Rights, Humanitarianism, and Development, 15(1), 41-57. https://doi.org/10.1353/hum.2024.a941435

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Nov 1, 2023
Online Publication Date Nov 10, 2024
Deposit Date Nov 13, 2024
Publicly Available Date Nov 13, 2024
Journal Humanity: An International Journal of Human Rights, Humanitarianism, and Development.
Print ISSN 2151-4364
Electronic ISSN 2151-4372
Publisher University of Pennsylvania Press (Penn Press)
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 15
Issue 1
Pages 41-57
DOI https://doi.org/10.1353/hum.2024.a941435
Related Public URLs https://muse.jhu.edu/issue/53487

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Copyright Statement
This is the version of the article accepted for publication in Humanity: An International Journal of Human Rights, Humanitarianism, and Development, 15 (1). pp. 41-57 (2024), published by University of Pennsylvania Press. Re-use is subject to the publisher’s terms and conditions.





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