na INLIS000000000002913 20221104121401 0010-0520002913 221104 | | eng 978-0-521-87089-4 eng 345.0235 345.0235 DRU a Drumbl, Mark A Atrocity, Punishment, and International Law / Mark A. Drumbl Cambridge : Cambriedge University Press, 2007 xiv, 298 p. This book rethinks how people who perpetrate atrocity crimes should be punished. Based on an 'on the ground' review of the sentencing of perpetrators of genocide and crimes against humanity in Rwanda, Bosnia, East Timor, and other places afflicted by atrocity, this book concludes that the international community's preference for prosecution and imprisonment may not be as effective as we hope. Instead, this book calls for a broader-based response to atrocity that welcomes bottom-up perspectives, including restorative, reparative, and reintegrative traditions, that may differ from the adversarial Western criminal trial. The time has come for international criminal law as a discipline to move beyond nascence and to welcome a more challenging stage: that of re-appraisal and self-improvement. This research serves important compilation and reference purposes for practitioners and scholars and, thereby, responds to the gap in the literature regarding data on sentencing and evaluative review thereof. Crimes Against Humanity Atrocities 10214/MKRI-P/XI-2008 10213/MKRI-P/XI-2008 10213/MKRI-P/XI-2008 10214/MKRI-P/XI-2008 10214/MKRI-P/XI-2008 10213/MKRI-P/XI-2008