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Who Shall Be Judge?: The United States, the International Criminal Court, and the Global Enforcement of Human Rights
2003
Human Rights Quarterly
The International Criminal Court, empowered to prosecute individuals guilty of the worst human rights atrocities, has encountered firm resistance from the United States. Underlying this dispute is a clash between two different models for achieving the global enforcement of human rights: a collective enforcement model exemplified by the Court, and a unidirectional enforcement model favored by the US. Both models present difficulties, but those of the collective model are curable, while those of
doi:10.1353/hrq.2003.0007
fatcat:7ifzxpxdsrd7rin7okgtiponpm