Publication

Nov 2008

This paper broadly discusses the International Criminal Court's (ICC) work in Africa. It focuses in particular on dispelling myths about the ICC and its activities. It contends that civil society and others committed to the work of the ICC in Africa need to proclaim the varied and compelling reasons why the Court should be trusted. A failure to do so risks the Court’s work coming undone due to myths and inaccuracies.

Download English (PDF, 24 pages, 756 KB)
Author Max du Plessis
Series ISS Papers
Issue 173
Publisher Institute for Security Studies (ISS)
Copyright © 2008 Institute for Security Studies (ISS)
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