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SENTENCING FOR THE 'CRIME OF CRIMES': APPRAISING THE PENAL JURISPRUDENCE
OF THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL TRIBUNAL FOR RWANDA
Robert D. Sloane
Boston University School of Law Working Paper 06-16
Abstract
Absent much prescriptive guidance in its Statute or other positive law,
the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) has been developing,
in effect, a 'common law' of sentencing for the most serious international
crimes: genocide and crimes against humanity. While it remains, as the
Appeals Chamber has said, 'premature to speak of an emerging 'penal regime',
and the coherence in sentencing practice that this denotes', this comment
offers some preliminary reflections on the substantive law and process
of sentencing as it has evolved through ICTR practice. Above all, I argue,
sentencing must, but has not yet, become an integral part of international
criminal justice rather than, as it has historically been treated, an
'afterthought'. The lack of sufficient attention to sentencing, evident
procedurally in the ICTR's abandonment of distinct sentencing hearings
and the expedient of 'transactional sentencing', at times manifests itself
in perfunctory sentencing analyses and jurisprudential confusion over
the proper role of ostensible sentencing factors including 'gravity of
the offence', 'zeal', 'heinous means', 'prior good character', and 'voluntary
commission'. Because of the inherent gravity of the crimes, the ICTR's
lack of adequate attention to sentencing has not, by and large, led it
to impose quantitatively incorrect sentences. But qualitatively, neglect
of sentencing inhibits the 'common law' evolution of a mature penal jurisprudence
that can contribute to the long-term normative goals of international
justice.
Keywords: sentencing, genocide, Rwanda, ICTR, international criminal
tribunals
JEL Classifications: K14, K33
Accepted Paper Series SSRN
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Robert D. Sloane Contact Information
rdsloane@bu.edu
Boston University School of Law
765 Commonwealth Ave
Boston, MA 02215
USA
Phone: 617-353-3208
Presentation and Publication Information:
Columbia Public Law Research Pazper No. 06-113
Journal of International Criminal Justice, Vol. 5, 2007
SSRN Location:
http://www.ssrn.com/abstract=916002
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