International Criminal Justice & post conflict
Accountability and complementarity between courts
By Mónica Martínez (21/10/2008)
Since the beginning of the 1990s, a new culture of accountability and defence of
human rights is being established.This international will reaffirms the link between international systems of accountability and the maintenance of peace and security.
International Criminal Justice & post conflict
European efforts in transitional justice
By María Avello (03/09/2008)
![]() |
| J.Vrijdag/AFP/Getty Images |
Over the last few years, Europe has reacted in different ways to the need for accountability that arises in countries and regions emerging from a conflict. This paper analyse the initiatives which have been undertaken by both the EU and the countries themselves in their internal legislation.
International Criminal Justice & post conflict
Seeking Accountability for Sexual Crimes in Post-Conflict Situations
By Fionnuala Ni Eigeartaigh (14/07/2008)
The systematic use of extreme violence, in particular sexual violence, in conflict and post-conflict situations raises the pressing question of how to end the cycle of impunity. On 13 and 14 May 2008, representatives of the International Criminal Court and the ad hoc tribunals, Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, human rights organisations, and the European Parliament were brought together.

Spencer Platt/Getty Images
International Criminal Justice & post conflict
Paramilitary demobilisation in Colombia: between peace and justice
By Felipe Gómez Isa (25/04/2008)
As Colombia seeks to resolve its long-running internal conflict, the country finds itself performing a precarious balancing act between the need for peace and the need for justice.

Getty Images
This working paper explores the international legal framework with regards to justice, truth and reparation and asks to what extent Colombia’s very own tailor-made framework is in line with these parameters.
International Criminal Justice & post conflict
Transitional justice: a European perspective
By María Avello (18/12/2007)
![]() |
| Gerard Cerles/AFP/Getty Images |
International Criminal Justice & post conflict
The two faces of impunity: the EU and International Criminal Court
By Vidal Martín (05/12/2007)
Since its creation in 1998, the European Union has offered numerous gestures of support to the International Criminal Court, a fact which has been clearly manifested at the institutional level. The EU has also been criticised by a number of states over the same period, either because of the form its support has taken, because there is not enough of it, or finally, because it is seen as trying to “appropriate” the ICC for itself.
International Criminal Justice & post conflict
The Role of Women in the Northern Ireland Peace Process
By Vidal Martín (20/04/2007)
After several ups and downs, the Northern Ireland peace process represents an exception to the European norm. It is the only peace process with clear prospects of stability, and at the same time, the only long term conflict to which, after numerous decades, resolution seems possible.
International Criminal Justice & post conflict
In no man's land. Internally displaced persons and refugees in Lebanon
By Vidal Martín (25/08/2006)
Almost a million people were affected by the Israeli offensive in
International Criminal Justice & post conflict
International humanitarian law and possible models of intervention in Lebanon
By Mariano Aguirre Ernst, Vidal Martín (17/07/2006)
The conflict in Lebanon is undermining a part of the State and seriously affecting civil society, which, at the start of the conflict, was already in a fragile long post-war situation, as the rest of the region was.






