DOMAC reports
- Reparation Workshop II: The interaction between Macc Claims Processes and Cases in Domestic Courts - Synopsis
- Reparation Workshop II: The interaction between Mass Claims Processes and Cases in Domestic Courts - Report
- Equal Standards? On the Dialectics between National Jurisdictions and the International Criminal Court, by Harmen van der Wilt, International Criminal Law Review, Volume 8, Numbers 1-2, 2008 , pp. 229-272.
- Procedural Obligations Under the European Convention on Human Rights: Useful Guidelines for the Assessment of ‘Unwillingness' and ‘Inability' in the context of the Complementarity Principle, by Harmen van der Wilt & Sandra Lyngdorf, International Criminal Law Review, Volume 9, Number 1, 2009 , pp. 39-75.
- Comparative Analysis of Prosecutions for Mass Atrocity Crimes in Canada, Netherlands, and Australia, by Antonietta Trapani, DOMAC/1, August 2009.
- Capacity Development in International Criminal Justice: A Mapping Exercise of Existing Practice, by Alejandro Chehtman and Ruth Mackenzie, DOMAC/2, September 2009. Annex Capacity Development.
- Sierra Leone: Interaction between International and National Responses to the Mass Atrocities, by Sigall Horovitz, DOMAC/3, December 2009.
- The ICJ Armed Activity Case – Reflections on States´ Obligation to Investigate and Prosecute Individuals for Serious Human Rights Violations and Grave Breaches of the Geneva Conventions, by Thordis Ingadottir, Nordic Journal of International Law, Volume 78, No. 4, 2009, pp. 581-598.
- Reparation Workshop I: The Interactions between Mass Claims Processes and Cases in Domestic Courts - Report
- International Settlement of Mass Atrocity Claims: Responses by Domestic Courts - Inventory Report, by Edda Kristjánsdóttir
- Preliminary Report on Case Studies
- Prosecutions and Sentencing in the Western Balkans, by Yael Ronen, with the assistance of Sharon Avital and Oren Tamir, DOMAC/4, February 2010.
- The Impact of the European Convention of Human Rights in the Context of War Crimes Trials in Bosnia and Herzegovina, by Silvia Borelli, DOMAC/5, November 2009
- The Impact of the Jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights on Domestic Investigations and Prosecutions of Serious Human Rights Violations by State Agents, by Silvia Borelli, with the assistance of Sandra Lyngdorf, DOMAC/7, May 2010
- National Law: A Small but Neat Utensil in the Toolbox of International Criminal Tribunals, by Harmen van der Wilt, International Criminal Law Review, Volume 10, Number 2, 2010, pp. 209-241.
- Rwanda: International and National Responses to the Mass Atrocities and their Interaction , by Sigall Horovitz, DOMAC/6, September 2010
- Bosnia and Herzegovina: The Interaction between the ICTY and Domestic Courts in Adjudicating International Crimes, by Yael Ronen, DOMAC/8, September 2011
- Universal Jurisdiction under Attack: An Assessment of African Misgivings towards International Criminal Justice as Administered by Western States, by Harmen van der Wilt, Journal of International Criminal Justice, Volume 9, Issue 5, 2011, pp. 1043-1066
- Developing Local Capacity for War Crimes Trials: Insights from BIH, Sierra Leone, and Colombia, by Alejandro Chehtman, DOMAC/9, June 2011
- Complementarity in the Congo: The direct Application of the Rome Statute in the Military Courts of the DRC, by Antonietta Trapani, DOMAC/12, November 2011
- Timor-Leste: Interaction between International and National Responses to the Mass Atrocities, by Natalie Rosen, DOMAC/15, November 2011
- The ICC and its normative impact on Colombia´s legal system, by Alejandro Chehtman, DOMAC/16, October 2011
- The Impact of the International Criminal Tribunal for Yugoslavia on War Crime Investigations and Prosecutions in Serbia, by Keren Michaeli, DOMAC/13, November 2011
- Developing Bosnia and Herzegovina´s Capacity to Process War Crimes Cases: Critical Notes on a 'Success Story', by Alejandro Chehtman, J Int Criminal Justice (2011) 9(3): 547-570
- The Impact of the International Criminal Tribunal for Yugoslavia on War Crime Investigations and Prosecutions in Croatia, by Keren Michaeli, DOMAC/10, December 2011
- DR Congo: Interaction between International and National Repsonses to the Mass Atrocities, by Sigall Horovitz, DOMAC/14, February 2012
- Assessing War Crimes Trials in the Territories of the Fomer Yugoslavia: Normative Impact of the ICTY, by Antonietta Trapani, DOMAC/11, September 2011
- "Two Sides of the Same Coin? Judging Milosevic and Serbia before the ICTY and ICJ", by Yuval Shany, in Timothy Waters (ed.), Milosevic - An Autopsy, OUP (forthcoming)
- "Who is Most Able and Willing? Complementarity and Victim Reparations at the International Criminal Court", by Edda Kristjansdottir, in Cecilia M. Bailliet (ed), Non-State Actors, Soft Law and Protective Regimes, Cambridge University Press (2012)
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"The Impact of the International Criminal Court for Rwanda and the Special Court for Sierra Leone on Impunity in Rwanda and Sierra Leone", by Sigall Horovitz, in Africa and the Future of International Criminal Justice (Eleven International Publishing, The Hague, 2012).
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The Impact of the ICC in Colombia: Positive Complementarity on Trial, by Alejandro Chehtman, DOMAC/17, October 2011
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Uganda: Interaction Between International and National Responses to the Mass Actrocities, by Sigall Horovitz, DOMAC/18, January 2013
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Sudan: Interaction Between International and National Judicial Responses to the Mass Atrocities in Darfur, by Sigall Horovitz, DOMAC/19, April 2013