101 nights on the discourse of self-legitimization: the case of Duško Tadić

This thesis addresses the legitimacy discourse of the ad-hoc International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, by focusing on a particular case study: the Interlocutory Motion challenging the jurisdiction of the Tribunal in the Dusko Tadi6 case. This, the first ever International Criminal T...

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Main Authors: Da Silva, Miguel Jesus Neves Ferreira, Vidal Bouzon, A.J.
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28096/
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author Da Silva, Miguel Jesus Neves Ferreira
Vidal Bouzon, A.J.
author_facet Da Silva, Miguel Jesus Neves Ferreira
Vidal Bouzon, A.J.
author_sort Da Silva, Miguel Jesus Neves Ferreira
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This thesis addresses the legitimacy discourse of the ad-hoc International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, by focusing on a particular case study: the Interlocutory Motion challenging the jurisdiction of the Tribunal in the Dusko Tadi6 case. This, the first ever International Criminal Tribunal established by the United Nations Security Council, faced in the initial proceedings with the first indictee to be present in the Chambers a challenge as to the lawfulness of its own establishment, and therefore as to its legitimacy. The lack of historical precedents for this novel jurisdiction, and the context of the more multicultural-driven international relations of the 1990s, that is, because of the collapse of the superpowers and the temporary suspension of the logic of a bipolar world, were all expected to validate a complex discourse of legitimacy, namely, through recourse to extra-legal references. In fact, the acceptance, and therefore the legitimacy, of the new jurisdiction depended on the recognition of a shared historical, cultural and political context, or, at least, of recognizable politicocultural references beyond the legalistic self-contained judicial speech. After extensively reviewing the initial materials of the challenge presented before the court, the thesis focuses its research on the Tribunal's Decisions, both at Trial and Appeal levels, identifying the attempts to break a self-referential legal discourse. The uncertainty of the historical moment, together with the hesitation on the use of politico-cultural references on the part of the Tribunal, sustains the conclusion of this thesis that no coherent legitimacy discourse is here attained.
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spelling nottingham-280962025-02-28T11:33:05Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28096/ 101 nights on the discourse of self-legitimization: the case of Duško Tadić Da Silva, Miguel Jesus Neves Ferreira Vidal Bouzon, A.J. This thesis addresses the legitimacy discourse of the ad-hoc International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, by focusing on a particular case study: the Interlocutory Motion challenging the jurisdiction of the Tribunal in the Dusko Tadi6 case. This, the first ever International Criminal Tribunal established by the United Nations Security Council, faced in the initial proceedings with the first indictee to be present in the Chambers a challenge as to the lawfulness of its own establishment, and therefore as to its legitimacy. The lack of historical precedents for this novel jurisdiction, and the context of the more multicultural-driven international relations of the 1990s, that is, because of the collapse of the superpowers and the temporary suspension of the logic of a bipolar world, were all expected to validate a complex discourse of legitimacy, namely, through recourse to extra-legal references. In fact, the acceptance, and therefore the legitimacy, of the new jurisdiction depended on the recognition of a shared historical, cultural and political context, or, at least, of recognizable politicocultural references beyond the legalistic self-contained judicial speech. After extensively reviewing the initial materials of the challenge presented before the court, the thesis focuses its research on the Tribunal's Decisions, both at Trial and Appeal levels, identifying the attempts to break a self-referential legal discourse. The uncertainty of the historical moment, together with the hesitation on the use of politico-cultural references on the part of the Tribunal, sustains the conclusion of this thesis that no coherent legitimacy discourse is here attained. 2011-12-15 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28096/1/555499.pdf Da Silva, Miguel Jesus Neves Ferreira and Vidal Bouzon, A.J. (2011) 101 nights on the discourse of self-legitimization: the case of Duško Tadić. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. dusan tadic yugoslavia yugoslav war war crimes atrocities trials
spellingShingle dusan tadic
yugoslavia
yugoslav war
war crimes
atrocities
trials
Da Silva, Miguel Jesus Neves Ferreira
Vidal Bouzon, A.J.
101 nights on the discourse of self-legitimization: the case of Duško Tadić
title 101 nights on the discourse of self-legitimization: the case of Duško Tadić
title_full 101 nights on the discourse of self-legitimization: the case of Duško Tadić
title_fullStr 101 nights on the discourse of self-legitimization: the case of Duško Tadić
title_full_unstemmed 101 nights on the discourse of self-legitimization: the case of Duško Tadić
title_short 101 nights on the discourse of self-legitimization: the case of Duško Tadić
title_sort 101 nights on the discourse of self-legitimization: the case of duško tadić
topic dusan tadic
yugoslavia
yugoslav war
war crimes
atrocities
trials
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28096/