di Miles Jackson (Autore)
This book examines how international law prohibits
state and individual complicity. Complicity is a derivative form of
responsibility that links an accomplice to the wrongdoing of a principal actor.
Whenever a legal system prohibits complicity, it must address certain questions
as to the content and structure of the rules. To understand how international
law answers these questions, this book proposes an analytical framework in
which complicity rules may be assessed and defends a normative claim as to how
they should be structured.
Anchored by this framework and normative claim, this
book shows that international criminal law regulates individual complicity in a
comprehensive way, using the doctrines of instigation and aiding and abetting
to inculpate complicit participants in international crimes. By contrast,
international law's regulation of state complicity was historically marked by
an absence of complicity rules. This is changing. In respect of state
complicity in the wrongdoing of another state, international law now imposes
both specific and general complicity obligations, the latter prohibiting states
from aiding or assisting another state in the commission of any internationally
wrongful act. In respect of the ways that states participate in harms caused by
non-state actors, the traditional normative structure of international law,
which imposed obligations only on states, foreclosed the possibility of prohibiting
the state's participation as a form of complicity. As that traditional
normative structure has evolved, so the possibility of holding states
responsible for complicity in the wrongdoing of non-state actors has emerged.
More and more, both the wrongs that international
actors commit, and the wrongs they help or encourage others to commit, matter.