Examples of ICC Statute in a sentence
Jescheck, H.H., 'The General Principles of International Criminal Law Set Out in Nuremberg, as Mirrored in the ICC Statute', 2(1) Journal of International Criminal Justice (2004), pp.
For the purposes of the following analysis, it is assumed that the content of the excerpted provisions of the ICC Statute is ap- plicable in respect of an employment of AI-related technologies in an armed conflict.Regarding the general individual-responsibility concept of attribution, the ICC Statute lays down that the Court shall have jurisdiction over natural persons27.
Other modes of responsibility listed in the ICC Statute concern ordering, soliciting, or inducing the commission of a crime37 or contributing to the commission or attempted commission of a crime in any other way by a group of persons acting with a common pur- pose38.
To ensure the possibility to apply indi- vidual responsibility in respect of war crimes under the ICC Statute, an employment of AI-related tech- nologies — at least one involved in conduct prohibit- ed as war crimes — may arguably need to be suscep- tible of the imposition of these penalties.
Also under that provision of the ICC Statute, knowl- edge means awareness that a circumstance exists or a consequence will occur in the ordinary course of events, and know and knowingly shall be construed accordingly33.
Adopted July 17, 1998, entry into force July 1, 2002 (hereafter ICC Statute).
Whether — and, if so, the extent to which — certain AI-related technolo- gies may or may not be employed in a manner that facilitates an exercise of those specific attributes concerning knowledge is yet another key area that warrants greater attention.Regarding the general individual-responsibility concept of modes of responsibility, under the ICC Statute a person shall be criminally responsible and liable for punishment for a crime within the juris- diction of the Court under certain circumstances34.
In Article 106 of the ICC Statute, a distinction is drawn between enforcement on the one hand and conditions of detention on the other.
Göran Sluiter, Implementation of the ICC Statute in the Dutch Legal Order, Journal of International Criminal Justice 2, Oxford University Press, 2004, p.
Article 49(3) of the Headquarters Agreement.after two thirds of a particular sentence have been served, in light of Article 110(3) of the Statute, which calls for the review of the sentence at such a moment.According to Article 103(4) of the ICC Statute, the host State shall make a prison facility available in accordance with the conditions set forth in the Headquarters Agreement.