Tuesday 17 June 2014

Talk at the ICC Summer School - Irish Centre of Human Rights, Galway

Dr. Mohamed Elewa Badar was invited by the Irish Centre for Human Rights, NUI Galway, to deliver a lecture at the ICC Summer School on 'The (mis)Use of Comparative Criminal Law in the Early Jurisprudence of the International Criminal Court'. The lecture was based on Dr. Badar's   forthcoming contribution 'General Principles of Law in the Early Jurisprudence of the ICC' in T Mariniello (ed.), The International Criminal Court in Search of Its Purpose and Identity, Routledge, (forthcoming Dec. 2014)

http://www.nuigalway.ie/irish-centre-human-rights/summerschools/iccsummerschool/



Dr. Mohamed Elewa Badar - ICC Summer School - ICHR, Galway 17 June 2014

Monday 2 June 2014

Talk at Harvard Law School -the Institute for Global Law and Policy Conference on ‘Heterodox Approaches to Islamic Law and Policy’


Dr. Mohamed Elewa Badar gives a talk at the Institute for Global Law and Policy Conference on 'Heterodox Approaches to Islamic Law and Policy', at Harvard Law School. Dr. Badar presented his recent publication on 'The International Criminal Court and the Nigerian Crisis: An Inquiry into the Boko Haram Ideology and Practices from an Islamic Law Perspective' which appeared this June in International Human Rights Law Review vol. 3/1 (2014) pp. 29-60

Sunday 1 June 2014

New Publication - ‘The International Criminal Court and the Nigerian Crisis: An Inquiry into the Boko Haram Ideology and Practices from an Islamic Law Perspective’

"Since its foundation in 1999 Boko Haram has carried out numerous acts of violence on the territory of Nigeria. The Office of the Prosecutor (OTP) of the International Criminal Court (ICC) has been monitoring the violence between Boko Haram and Nigerian armed forces as part of a preliminary investigation.  It has stated that there is reason to believe that Boko Haram is responsible for war crimes and crimes against humanity and that the violence between Boko Haram and the armed forces has reached the level of an armed conflict of non-international character under international law. This paper assesses certain types of behaviour of Boko Haram from an Islamic law perspective and examines whether Islamic law condemns or justifies such acts. Arguably, it would help the ICC in asserting the legitimacy of its judgments, if it was able to prove that such judgments are compatible with the legal and belief system recognised by the actors at trial. In turn it would enable the Court to deal with at least some of the criticism aimed at it, for being an imperialistic institution."

Abstract of the article, co-authored with S. Amin and N. Higgins, which appeared today in International Human Rights Law Review vol. 3/1 (2014) pp. 29-60