The
Whitney R. Harris World Law Institute at Washington University School of Law
seeks submissions of essays for the Benjamin B. Ferencz Essay Competition, held
on the occasion of the Tenth Anniversary of the International Criminal Court.
ELIGIBILITY
AND REQUIREMENTS
- Contestants
must be 20 years of age or older.
- Contestants
must have completed their high school studies. Law students, PhD
students and young scholars are especially invited to apply.
- The
essay must be written solely by the candidate.
- The
essay should take the form of a law review style article.
- Submissions
must be original and unpublished works of under 6,000 words, including
footnotes.
- Footnotes
must conform to authoritative standard rules of legal citation and must
include a description of each authority adequate to allow a reasonable
reader to identify and locate the authority in a publication of general circulation.
- The
essay must be typed and double-spaced.
SUBMISSION
INSTRUCTIONS
- Contestants
are strongly encouraged to register for the competition as soon as
possible at the following
link: http://law.wustl.edu/harris/ferenczessaycompetition/ [Registration].
- Submissions
must be made electronically at the following link:
http://law.wustl.edu/harris/ferenczessaycompetition/update.asp [Submit your essay]
- A
complete submission includes a cover page with the author’s relevant
information (name, contact information, highest level of education
completed and area of study, and the registration ID number) and the essay
in a Microsoft Word or PDF document. Please ensure that the essay pages do
not contain any information about the author.
- Contestants
may submit only one entry. Multiple or incomplete submissions will not be
considered.
AWARD
The
first-place winner of the Essay Contest will receive an award of
US$10,000. Second- and third-place runners-up will each receive an
honorable mention and a plaque as well as runner-up awards in the amount of
US$2,500 each. The first-place winner of the Contest will be invited to
St. Louis, Missouri, for an award ceremony that will take place during the
International Criminal Court at Ten conference in November 2012. The essay will
be included in the symposium issue published by the Washington University Global Studies Law Review resulting
from the conference. The Whitney R. Harris World Law Institute will cover
the winner’s travel expenses to St. Louis, including airfare, accommodations
and meals.
Please
note that there will not be a participation certification given for competing
in this essay contest.
REVIEW
CRITERIA
- Entries
will be reviewed by a distinguished panel of impartial judges.
- Entries
will be judged on the basis of originality, style and organization,
quality of analysis and quality of research.
- Essays
will be judged anonymously.
ESSAY
QUESTION PRESENTED
The
essay must address the following question: Under what conditions may acts
that constitute illegal use of armed force and that result in the widespread or
systematic attack upon a civilian population be prosecuted as crimes against
humanity by the International Criminal Court, pursuant to the Rome Statute.
Contestants
are encouraged to consider the following and develop the arguments set forth in
the description below:
In
June 2010, a conference took place in Kampala, Uganda, to review the Statute
that had been adopted in Rome to govern the International Criminal Court (ICC).
It was agreed that the new Court would exercise jurisdiction over “the most
serious crimes of concern to the international community as a whole.” Four
categories of crimes were identified in article 5 of the Statute as falling
within this jurisdiction: the crime of genocide, crimes against humanity, war
crimes and the crime of aggression. However, the Court could only exercise its
jurisdiction over the crime of aggression after a number of conditions had been
fulfilled. One of the primary goals of the Review Conference in Kampala was to
consider amending the Statute to add a definition of the crime of aggression
and thereby close the gap in the ICC's jurisdiction. When the Kampala
conference ended, a definition of aggression was adopted by consensus, now
found in article 8 bis of the Rome Statute, but implementation of that
definition was postponed until, at the earliest, 2017, meaning that the Court
could not exercise jurisdiction over the crime of aggression until after that
time. Thus, what the Nuremberg Tribunal in 1945 had condemned as “the
supreme international crime” cannot currently be prosecuted at the ICC.
Article
7 of the Rome Statute sets forth a definition of crimes against humanity, and
lists as predicate acts, among others, “murder,” “torture,” “enslavement,”
“rape” and “other inhumane acts of a similar character intentionally causing
great suffering, or serious injury to body or to mental or physical health”
(Article 7(1)(k)). No prior Security Council approval is required for
prosecution of crimes against humanity assuming jurisdiction exists under
article 13(a) or (c) of the Statute. Intent and knowledge are essential
elements that must be proved, and pursuant to article 30(2), a person is deemed
to have intent in relation to a consequence where either that person “means to
cause that consequence or is aware that it will occur in the ordinary course of
events.”
Thus,
the question arises whether individuals responsible for the illegal use of
armed force, knowing that their actions will result in the killing of large
numbers of civilians, may be held accountable for crimes against humanity under
the spirit and letter of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court.
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