Papers by Association Pravnik
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RULE OF LAW, TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE AND HUMAN RIGHTS, Year 12, Volume 12, 2021
This issue of the International Journal on Rule of Law, Transitional Justice and Human Rights in ... more This issue of the International Journal on Rule of Law, Transitional Justice and Human Rights in front of you is already the eleventh edition of an annual, peer-reviewed academic journal, co- published by the Association “Pravnik” and the Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung’s Rule of Law Programme South East Europe.
INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW AND TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE IN LIBYA: TWO UNSC-MANDATED MECHANISMS
BY LORENZO DAL MONTE
TOWARDS A RISK PERSPECTIVE OF TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE PROCESSES
BY BERIT HAUPT
THE ROLE OF GENDER IN GENOCIDE
BY AMILA HUSIĆ
CULTURAL HERITAGE – AN OVERLOOKED COMPONENT IN TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE?
BY MARIE WARTENBERG
THE PHENOMENON OF TWO SCHOOLS UNDER ONE ROOF – WHEN APPLES AND PEARS DO NOT MIX
BY TARIK EKMEŠČIĆ
THE CONTRIBUTION OF INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURTS TO
TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE: A COMPARISON BETWEEN THE ICTY AND THE ICC
BY DANAE DRIESSEN
CHILDREN AS VICTIMS OF WAR CRIMES
BY MICHAELA TRTKOVA
THE GENDERED IMPLICATIONS OF CONSOCIATIONAL PEACE AGREEMENTS: A SUB-NATIONAL LEVEL ANALYSIS OF BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA
BY TAJMA KAPIĆ
THE EUROPEAN COURT OF HUMAN RIGHTS’ ENGAGEMENT WITH INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS INSTRUMENTS: LOOKING AT THE CASES OF DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
BY EBRU DEMIR
PURSUIT FOR JUSTICE: VOICES AND PERCEPTIONS ON JUSTICE OF VICTIMS OF GENOCIDE
BY MARIJANA TOMA
This study attempts to frame the available data on substantive representation of women in the leg... more This study attempts to frame the available data on substantive representation of women in the legislatures in Bosnia and Herzegovina in order to assess the success of the quota for the under-represented sex as the policy option applied. Data collected for this study indicates that quotas are not the problem but a part of the solution, and that we need to move away from the debate on critical mass in order to focus on the need to have female MPs represent the interests of women as a group. This study concludes that the quota should not remain the only policy option to achieve substantive representation and provides main stake-holders with a set of recommendations for future actions aimed at supporting the substantive representation of women as a group.
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RULE OF LAW, TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE AND HUMAN RIGHTS , Year 11, Volume 11, 2020
This issue of the International Journal on Rule of Law, Transitional Justice and Human Rights in ... more This issue of the International Journal on Rule of Law, Transitional Justice and Human Rights in front of you is already the eleventh edition of an annual, peer-reviewed academic journal, co- published by the Association “Pravnik” and the Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung’s Rule of Law Programme South East Europe. The International Journal is a direct output of the International Summer School Sarajevo (ISSS) which our two organisations co-organise since 2006. Over a period of 14 years, the ISSS has attracted more than four hundred students and young professionals from Europe, Asia and the Americas. After each edition of the ISSS, our aim was to engage our alumni to contribute to academic discussion with their papers on contemporary topics such as Rule of Law, Transitional Justice or Human Rights. An additional goal is to promote an interdisciplinary approach and build bridges between academia and practitioners in these relevant areas. With the origins of the transitional justice work dating back to the post-World War II period in Europa with the establishment of the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg, transitional justice has played a key role in the last decades. One major step was the establishment of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) in 1993. What started as an ad hoc measure quickly became a role model: Since the creation of the ICTY, several international courts have been established to respond to revolting atrocities just like in Rwanda or Cambodia, and a permanent International Criminal Court is now operating in The Hague. In addition, the work of these courts have favoured investigations by national jurisdiction and generated a rich jurisprudence of international humanitarian law. These achievements don’t deprive transitional justice from its uninterrupted importance. Many problems all over the world remain unsolved, constituting an inexhaustible source for its application. This is proved by the variety of topics chosen by the authors of this Journal: It ranges from amnesty and human rights in El Salvador to gender transformation justice in Bosnia and Herzegovina, giving examples from Latin American countries as well as from Europe. By doing so, it does not only give an overview of the current worldwide situation of transitional justice, but also suggests alternative and critical approaches to contemporary challenges of transitional justice. Just like the previous ten editions, the Journal will be open to the public as it represents the ISSS’ contribution to global efforts in analysing, understanding and teaching about the rule of law, transitional justice and human rights.
Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung e.V.
Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung e.V.
The eighth edition of the International Journal on Rule of Law, Transitional Justice and Human Ri... more The eighth edition of the International Journal on Rule of Law, Transitional Justice and Human Rights in front of you is a peer-reviewed International Journal published by the Association “Pravnik” and the Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung’s Rule of Law Programme South East Europe. This International Journal is a direct output of the International Summer School Sarajevo (ISSS) which our two organisations co-organise since 2006. During its 11 editions the International Summer School Sarajevo has attracted over three hundred students and young professionals from Europe, Asia and the Americas. After each edition of the International Summer School Sarajevo, our aim was to engage our alumni to contribute to academic discussion with their papers on contemporary topics such as Rule of Law, Transitional Justice or Human Rights. An additional goal is to promote an interdisciplinary approach and build bridges between academia and practitioners in these relevant areas.
Although there seems to be a universal understanding that peace and stability are crucial elements of modern societies, still too many violent conflicts are ongoing and will eventually destroy the fibre of communities affected with conflict. After the collapse of communism, with the transitions and violent conflicts which followed, it was self-evident that a new approach would be needed for these countries to recover. Transitional Justice was coined as a holistic approach offering instruments such as criminal prosecution, truth commissions, outreach and memorialization which were added to instruments already existing at that time, such as institution building, development of a sustainable rule of law and human rights systems, to name but a few.
Today, the concept is no longer new. As Ruti G. Teitel asserts in her book (reviewed in this Journal), Transitional Justice today is globalized and currently forms part of a high number of post-conflict missions. However, in most countries, the application of transitional justice faces intricate challenges and fails to deliver the promise of sustainable peace and reconciliation. There already is a quite some research available, while in our view it focuses too much on criminal justice and too little on other transitional justice instruments such as truth commissions, truth speaking and outreach. Since our International Summer School is placed in Sarajevo, we recognised the need to focus on the topic of transitional justice as a new approach in dealing with past atrocities and a strategy for sustainable approach to justice, rule of law, reconciliation and peace building. The articles in this Journal also explore the interplay between Transitional Justice and other processes and in particular the rule of law, human rights and Europeanization, Globalization and others.
With the eighth edition of the Journal in your hands, we hope that you will recognize new generation of voices from the field, suggesting alternative and critical approaches to contemporary challenges of transitional justice. The variety of topics chosen by the authors is indeed inspiring as it ranges from violations of rights of individuals to the group rights. Just like its first seven editions, the Journal will be open for public as it represents the ISSS’ contribution to global efforts in analyzing, understanding and teaching about the rule of law, transitional justice and human rights.
The purpose of this essay is to indicate the big connection and the key role which the individual... more The purpose of this essay is to indicate the big connection and the key role which the individual security and the human rights have in the big picture called international security. In order to feel safe and secure in my country I need to be assured that the country can provide me with all the mechanisms of objective justice, safety and equality in all the institutions.
I am from a small country from the Balkans, called Macedonia, a country whose people are confronted with breached human rights and without а glimmer of democracy in their lives. Macedonia is facing a violation of the privacy of almost 20.000 of its citizens, non-government organizations, religious organizations, and it is happening because there is a small organized criminal group of politicians in the current government that are having financial appetites that need to be contented.
With the sixth edition of the Journal in front of you, we hope to that you will recognize new gen... more With the sixth edition of the Journal in front of you, we hope to that you will recognize new generation of voices from the field suggesting alternative and critical approaches to contemporary challenges of transitional justice. Just like its first four editions, the Journal will be open for public as it represents the ISSS’ contribution to global efforts in analyzing, understanding and teaching about the rule of law, transitional justice and human rights.
You will find essays by
REVIEWING THE NARRATIVE OF THE DOUBLE STANDARD EUROPE CONCERNING COLLECTIVE
MINORITY RIGHTS
BY HELGA MOLBÆK-STEENSIG
OPINION 2/13 OF THE CJEU: HOW THE ACCESSION OF THE EU TO THE ECHR ENDED UP
BEING A HARDLE RACE WITH AN UNKNOWN POINT OF ARRIVAL
BY VASILEIOS I. CHRISTOGIORGOS
TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE FOR MALE VICTIMS OF CONFLICT-RELATED SEXUAL AND GENDERBASED
VIOLENCE?
BY PHILIPP SCHULZ
BRIDGING THE GAP BETWEEN LAW AND REALITY: THE ENDURANCE OF OPPRESSIVE
CULTURAL NORMS AND THE SILENCING OF SURVIVORS OF DOMESTIC VIOLENCE IN BOSNIA
AND HERZEGOVINA
BY CLAIRE NEVIN
YET ANOTHER GENOCIDE AT EUROPE’S DOORSTEPS? SEXUAL AND GENDER-BASED
VIOLENCE AGAINST YAZIDI WOMEN TWENTY YEARS AFTER RWANDA AND BOSNIA AND
HERZEGOVINA
BY ZUZANA PAVLEKOVA
THE INADEQUACY OF THE UN LEGAL SYSTEM REMEDIES FOR GENDER - BASED VIOLENCE AS
AN EXAMPLE OF THE INTERNATIONAL RULE OF LAW FAILURE AND THE EUROPEAN
JURISPRUDENCE RESPONSE
BY OLGA KOSTANIAK
ASYLUM SEEKERS FROM ASIA AND AFRICA ON THEIR WAY TO WESTERN EUROPE: POSITION
OF SERBIA AND OTHER COUNTRIES IN THE REGION AS TRANSIT STATIONS
BY ALDIN ZENOVIĆ
SAFE WATERS WITH EUNAVFOR MED? COUNTERING THE SMUGGLING OF MIGRANTS IN THE
SOUTH MEDITERRANEAN WITH A MILITARY OPERATION: EUNAVFOR MED AND THE
LEGITIMACY OF THE APPLICATION OF THE RIGHT OF HOT PURSUIT?
BY GIANNA MERKI
THE GERMAN–BRITISH REFORM INITIATIVE FOR BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA: A FRESH
START OR LOWERING THE STANDARDS OF CONDITIONALITY FOR EUROPEAN UNION
MEMBERSHIP?
BY FABIAN MÖPERT
SHOULD SAIF AL-ISLAM GADDAFI BE TRIED IN LIBYA OR THE HAGUE? TOWARDS A
MONITORING MECHANISM THAT RECONCILES THE ICC WITH TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE
BY OLIVIA NEDERLANDT
THE RIGHT TO KNOW AND THE DEALING WITH THE PAST PROCESS IN CROATIA
BY KRISTIAN XAVIER CARRERA KURJENOJA
DEALING WITH THE PAST: CONVENTIONAL TRUTH, INCONVENIENT TRUTH OR UNPOPULAR
TRUTH ABOUT KOSOVO
BY BESARTA PRENGA
INDIVIDUAL SAFETY TOGETHER WITH HUMAN RIGHTS, FIRST STEP TOWARDS
INTERNATIONAL STABILITY
BY ZHIVKA IVANOVA
STRIPPING HUMANITY DEHUMANISATION OF VICTIMS AND PERPETRATORS IN GROSS HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS TESTED IN THE BOSNIAN CASE
BY FEDERICA SUSTERSIC
Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung e.V.
Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung e.V.
Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung e.V.
Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung e.V.
Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung e.V.
Books by Association Pravnik
Uploads
Papers by Association Pravnik
INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW AND TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE IN LIBYA: TWO UNSC-MANDATED MECHANISMS
BY LORENZO DAL MONTE
TOWARDS A RISK PERSPECTIVE OF TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE PROCESSES
BY BERIT HAUPT
THE ROLE OF GENDER IN GENOCIDE
BY AMILA HUSIĆ
CULTURAL HERITAGE – AN OVERLOOKED COMPONENT IN TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE?
BY MARIE WARTENBERG
THE PHENOMENON OF TWO SCHOOLS UNDER ONE ROOF – WHEN APPLES AND PEARS DO NOT MIX
BY TARIK EKMEŠČIĆ
THE CONTRIBUTION OF INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURTS TO
TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE: A COMPARISON BETWEEN THE ICTY AND THE ICC
BY DANAE DRIESSEN
CHILDREN AS VICTIMS OF WAR CRIMES
BY MICHAELA TRTKOVA
THE GENDERED IMPLICATIONS OF CONSOCIATIONAL PEACE AGREEMENTS: A SUB-NATIONAL LEVEL ANALYSIS OF BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA
BY TAJMA KAPIĆ
THE EUROPEAN COURT OF HUMAN RIGHTS’ ENGAGEMENT WITH INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS INSTRUMENTS: LOOKING AT THE CASES OF DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
BY EBRU DEMIR
PURSUIT FOR JUSTICE: VOICES AND PERCEPTIONS ON JUSTICE OF VICTIMS OF GENOCIDE
BY MARIJANA TOMA
Although there seems to be a universal understanding that peace and stability are crucial elements of modern societies, still too many violent conflicts are ongoing and will eventually destroy the fibre of communities affected with conflict. After the collapse of communism, with the transitions and violent conflicts which followed, it was self-evident that a new approach would be needed for these countries to recover. Transitional Justice was coined as a holistic approach offering instruments such as criminal prosecution, truth commissions, outreach and memorialization which were added to instruments already existing at that time, such as institution building, development of a sustainable rule of law and human rights systems, to name but a few.
Today, the concept is no longer new. As Ruti G. Teitel asserts in her book (reviewed in this Journal), Transitional Justice today is globalized and currently forms part of a high number of post-conflict missions. However, in most countries, the application of transitional justice faces intricate challenges and fails to deliver the promise of sustainable peace and reconciliation. There already is a quite some research available, while in our view it focuses too much on criminal justice and too little on other transitional justice instruments such as truth commissions, truth speaking and outreach. Since our International Summer School is placed in Sarajevo, we recognised the need to focus on the topic of transitional justice as a new approach in dealing with past atrocities and a strategy for sustainable approach to justice, rule of law, reconciliation and peace building. The articles in this Journal also explore the interplay between Transitional Justice and other processes and in particular the rule of law, human rights and Europeanization, Globalization and others.
With the eighth edition of the Journal in your hands, we hope that you will recognize new generation of voices from the field, suggesting alternative and critical approaches to contemporary challenges of transitional justice. The variety of topics chosen by the authors is indeed inspiring as it ranges from violations of rights of individuals to the group rights. Just like its first seven editions, the Journal will be open for public as it represents the ISSS’ contribution to global efforts in analyzing, understanding and teaching about the rule of law, transitional justice and human rights.
I am from a small country from the Balkans, called Macedonia, a country whose people are confronted with breached human rights and without а glimmer of democracy in their lives. Macedonia is facing a violation of the privacy of almost 20.000 of its citizens, non-government organizations, religious organizations, and it is happening because there is a small organized criminal group of politicians in the current government that are having financial appetites that need to be contented.
You will find essays by
REVIEWING THE NARRATIVE OF THE DOUBLE STANDARD EUROPE CONCERNING COLLECTIVE
MINORITY RIGHTS
BY HELGA MOLBÆK-STEENSIG
OPINION 2/13 OF THE CJEU: HOW THE ACCESSION OF THE EU TO THE ECHR ENDED UP
BEING A HARDLE RACE WITH AN UNKNOWN POINT OF ARRIVAL
BY VASILEIOS I. CHRISTOGIORGOS
TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE FOR MALE VICTIMS OF CONFLICT-RELATED SEXUAL AND GENDERBASED
VIOLENCE?
BY PHILIPP SCHULZ
BRIDGING THE GAP BETWEEN LAW AND REALITY: THE ENDURANCE OF OPPRESSIVE
CULTURAL NORMS AND THE SILENCING OF SURVIVORS OF DOMESTIC VIOLENCE IN BOSNIA
AND HERZEGOVINA
BY CLAIRE NEVIN
YET ANOTHER GENOCIDE AT EUROPE’S DOORSTEPS? SEXUAL AND GENDER-BASED
VIOLENCE AGAINST YAZIDI WOMEN TWENTY YEARS AFTER RWANDA AND BOSNIA AND
HERZEGOVINA
BY ZUZANA PAVLEKOVA
THE INADEQUACY OF THE UN LEGAL SYSTEM REMEDIES FOR GENDER - BASED VIOLENCE AS
AN EXAMPLE OF THE INTERNATIONAL RULE OF LAW FAILURE AND THE EUROPEAN
JURISPRUDENCE RESPONSE
BY OLGA KOSTANIAK
ASYLUM SEEKERS FROM ASIA AND AFRICA ON THEIR WAY TO WESTERN EUROPE: POSITION
OF SERBIA AND OTHER COUNTRIES IN THE REGION AS TRANSIT STATIONS
BY ALDIN ZENOVIĆ
SAFE WATERS WITH EUNAVFOR MED? COUNTERING THE SMUGGLING OF MIGRANTS IN THE
SOUTH MEDITERRANEAN WITH A MILITARY OPERATION: EUNAVFOR MED AND THE
LEGITIMACY OF THE APPLICATION OF THE RIGHT OF HOT PURSUIT?
BY GIANNA MERKI
THE GERMAN–BRITISH REFORM INITIATIVE FOR BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA: A FRESH
START OR LOWERING THE STANDARDS OF CONDITIONALITY FOR EUROPEAN UNION
MEMBERSHIP?
BY FABIAN MÖPERT
SHOULD SAIF AL-ISLAM GADDAFI BE TRIED IN LIBYA OR THE HAGUE? TOWARDS A
MONITORING MECHANISM THAT RECONCILES THE ICC WITH TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE
BY OLIVIA NEDERLANDT
THE RIGHT TO KNOW AND THE DEALING WITH THE PAST PROCESS IN CROATIA
BY KRISTIAN XAVIER CARRERA KURJENOJA
DEALING WITH THE PAST: CONVENTIONAL TRUTH, INCONVENIENT TRUTH OR UNPOPULAR
TRUTH ABOUT KOSOVO
BY BESARTA PRENGA
INDIVIDUAL SAFETY TOGETHER WITH HUMAN RIGHTS, FIRST STEP TOWARDS
INTERNATIONAL STABILITY
BY ZHIVKA IVANOVA
STRIPPING HUMANITY DEHUMANISATION OF VICTIMS AND PERPETRATORS IN GROSS HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS TESTED IN THE BOSNIAN CASE
BY FEDERICA SUSTERSIC
Books by Association Pravnik
INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW AND TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE IN LIBYA: TWO UNSC-MANDATED MECHANISMS
BY LORENZO DAL MONTE
TOWARDS A RISK PERSPECTIVE OF TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE PROCESSES
BY BERIT HAUPT
THE ROLE OF GENDER IN GENOCIDE
BY AMILA HUSIĆ
CULTURAL HERITAGE – AN OVERLOOKED COMPONENT IN TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE?
BY MARIE WARTENBERG
THE PHENOMENON OF TWO SCHOOLS UNDER ONE ROOF – WHEN APPLES AND PEARS DO NOT MIX
BY TARIK EKMEŠČIĆ
THE CONTRIBUTION OF INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURTS TO
TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE: A COMPARISON BETWEEN THE ICTY AND THE ICC
BY DANAE DRIESSEN
CHILDREN AS VICTIMS OF WAR CRIMES
BY MICHAELA TRTKOVA
THE GENDERED IMPLICATIONS OF CONSOCIATIONAL PEACE AGREEMENTS: A SUB-NATIONAL LEVEL ANALYSIS OF BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA
BY TAJMA KAPIĆ
THE EUROPEAN COURT OF HUMAN RIGHTS’ ENGAGEMENT WITH INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS INSTRUMENTS: LOOKING AT THE CASES OF DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
BY EBRU DEMIR
PURSUIT FOR JUSTICE: VOICES AND PERCEPTIONS ON JUSTICE OF VICTIMS OF GENOCIDE
BY MARIJANA TOMA
Although there seems to be a universal understanding that peace and stability are crucial elements of modern societies, still too many violent conflicts are ongoing and will eventually destroy the fibre of communities affected with conflict. After the collapse of communism, with the transitions and violent conflicts which followed, it was self-evident that a new approach would be needed for these countries to recover. Transitional Justice was coined as a holistic approach offering instruments such as criminal prosecution, truth commissions, outreach and memorialization which were added to instruments already existing at that time, such as institution building, development of a sustainable rule of law and human rights systems, to name but a few.
Today, the concept is no longer new. As Ruti G. Teitel asserts in her book (reviewed in this Journal), Transitional Justice today is globalized and currently forms part of a high number of post-conflict missions. However, in most countries, the application of transitional justice faces intricate challenges and fails to deliver the promise of sustainable peace and reconciliation. There already is a quite some research available, while in our view it focuses too much on criminal justice and too little on other transitional justice instruments such as truth commissions, truth speaking and outreach. Since our International Summer School is placed in Sarajevo, we recognised the need to focus on the topic of transitional justice as a new approach in dealing with past atrocities and a strategy for sustainable approach to justice, rule of law, reconciliation and peace building. The articles in this Journal also explore the interplay between Transitional Justice and other processes and in particular the rule of law, human rights and Europeanization, Globalization and others.
With the eighth edition of the Journal in your hands, we hope that you will recognize new generation of voices from the field, suggesting alternative and critical approaches to contemporary challenges of transitional justice. The variety of topics chosen by the authors is indeed inspiring as it ranges from violations of rights of individuals to the group rights. Just like its first seven editions, the Journal will be open for public as it represents the ISSS’ contribution to global efforts in analyzing, understanding and teaching about the rule of law, transitional justice and human rights.
I am from a small country from the Balkans, called Macedonia, a country whose people are confronted with breached human rights and without а glimmer of democracy in their lives. Macedonia is facing a violation of the privacy of almost 20.000 of its citizens, non-government organizations, religious organizations, and it is happening because there is a small organized criminal group of politicians in the current government that are having financial appetites that need to be contented.
You will find essays by
REVIEWING THE NARRATIVE OF THE DOUBLE STANDARD EUROPE CONCERNING COLLECTIVE
MINORITY RIGHTS
BY HELGA MOLBÆK-STEENSIG
OPINION 2/13 OF THE CJEU: HOW THE ACCESSION OF THE EU TO THE ECHR ENDED UP
BEING A HARDLE RACE WITH AN UNKNOWN POINT OF ARRIVAL
BY VASILEIOS I. CHRISTOGIORGOS
TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE FOR MALE VICTIMS OF CONFLICT-RELATED SEXUAL AND GENDERBASED
VIOLENCE?
BY PHILIPP SCHULZ
BRIDGING THE GAP BETWEEN LAW AND REALITY: THE ENDURANCE OF OPPRESSIVE
CULTURAL NORMS AND THE SILENCING OF SURVIVORS OF DOMESTIC VIOLENCE IN BOSNIA
AND HERZEGOVINA
BY CLAIRE NEVIN
YET ANOTHER GENOCIDE AT EUROPE’S DOORSTEPS? SEXUAL AND GENDER-BASED
VIOLENCE AGAINST YAZIDI WOMEN TWENTY YEARS AFTER RWANDA AND BOSNIA AND
HERZEGOVINA
BY ZUZANA PAVLEKOVA
THE INADEQUACY OF THE UN LEGAL SYSTEM REMEDIES FOR GENDER - BASED VIOLENCE AS
AN EXAMPLE OF THE INTERNATIONAL RULE OF LAW FAILURE AND THE EUROPEAN
JURISPRUDENCE RESPONSE
BY OLGA KOSTANIAK
ASYLUM SEEKERS FROM ASIA AND AFRICA ON THEIR WAY TO WESTERN EUROPE: POSITION
OF SERBIA AND OTHER COUNTRIES IN THE REGION AS TRANSIT STATIONS
BY ALDIN ZENOVIĆ
SAFE WATERS WITH EUNAVFOR MED? COUNTERING THE SMUGGLING OF MIGRANTS IN THE
SOUTH MEDITERRANEAN WITH A MILITARY OPERATION: EUNAVFOR MED AND THE
LEGITIMACY OF THE APPLICATION OF THE RIGHT OF HOT PURSUIT?
BY GIANNA MERKI
THE GERMAN–BRITISH REFORM INITIATIVE FOR BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA: A FRESH
START OR LOWERING THE STANDARDS OF CONDITIONALITY FOR EUROPEAN UNION
MEMBERSHIP?
BY FABIAN MÖPERT
SHOULD SAIF AL-ISLAM GADDAFI BE TRIED IN LIBYA OR THE HAGUE? TOWARDS A
MONITORING MECHANISM THAT RECONCILES THE ICC WITH TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE
BY OLIVIA NEDERLANDT
THE RIGHT TO KNOW AND THE DEALING WITH THE PAST PROCESS IN CROATIA
BY KRISTIAN XAVIER CARRERA KURJENOJA
DEALING WITH THE PAST: CONVENTIONAL TRUTH, INCONVENIENT TRUTH OR UNPOPULAR
TRUTH ABOUT KOSOVO
BY BESARTA PRENGA
INDIVIDUAL SAFETY TOGETHER WITH HUMAN RIGHTS, FIRST STEP TOWARDS
INTERNATIONAL STABILITY
BY ZHIVKA IVANOVA
STRIPPING HUMANITY DEHUMANISATION OF VICTIMS AND PERPETRATORS IN GROSS HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS TESTED IN THE BOSNIAN CASE
BY FEDERICA SUSTERSIC