
Contents
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FROM INTERNATIONAL TO WORLD SOCIETY FROM INTERNATIONAL TO WORLD SOCIETY
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EXTENDING THE ‘SOLIDARIST MOMENT’ EXTENDING THE ‘SOLIDARIST MOMENT’
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A CONSTITUTIONAL MOMENT: THE ROME CONFERENCE A CONSTITUTIONAL MOMENT: THE ROME CONFERENCE
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CONSTITUTING WORLD SOCIETY: THE ROME STATUTE CONSTITUTING WORLD SOCIETY: THE ROME STATUTE
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THE COUNTER-REVOLUTION THE COUNTER-REVOLUTION
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CONCLUSION CONCLUSION
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4 4 The Rome Statute and the Constitution of World Society
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Published:May 2007
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Abstract
This chapter demonstrates how the Rome Statute creates a Court that is legally separate from the society of states. To the extent that it gives victims of core crimes a means of legal redress that they would not otherwise have, the Statute helps to constitute ‘world’ as opposed to ‘international’ society. This claim is qualified by noting how the Court will in many respects be dependent on state support and by highlighting how the concessions that were made to the values of international society (i.e. sovereign consent and international order between states) complicates the Court's claim to be independent. As background to this analysis, the chapter summarises the various ways in which the English School have sought to define world society. It also describes how the UN Security Council's creation of ad hoc courts extended a ‘solidarist moment’, which was ultimately weakened by the charge of selective justice and the material costs of setting up and running such courts.
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