Counsel Misconduct before the International Criminal Court: Professional Responsibility in International Criminal Defence
By (Author) Till Gut
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
12th November 2012
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
International law: courts and procedures
341.55
Hardback
372
Width 156mm, Height 234mm, Spine 22mm
743g
This is the first comprehensive study of the law governing professional misconduct by defence lawyers before the International Criminal Court. The ICC's regulatory regime was introduced in response to instances of misconduct experienced by other international and domestic criminal courts. The book first turns to how the ICC's forerunners - the International Criminal Tribunals for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda and the Special Court for Sierra Leone - coped with misconduct, often resulting in controversy. The book also looks at the approaches that have evolved in Germany and the United States, reflecting the different role of defence lawyers in the civil and common law criminal justice traditions. The book offers a unique insight into the professional responsibilities of defence lawyers within the various international and national regimes. Offering practical guidance on disciplinary systems and other sanctioning mechanisms, it also explores the inherent tension at the heart of the defence lawyer's role: to ensure the human right to a fair trial we want them to be zealous advocates for their clients; at the same time we ask them to commit themselves as officers of the court.
Till Gut, formerly of the University of Cologne, is a lawyer in the extradition and mutual legal assistance unit of the German Federal Office of Justice.