
The President on Trial
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Content
- Foreword, Denis Mukwege, 2018 Nobel Peace Prize Co-recipient
- Hissène Habré on Trial: Mapping the Long Road to Justice (Sharon Weill, Kim Thuy Seelinger, and Kerstin Carlson)
- Part I. The Trial as Told by its Actors
- Editors' Introduction
- A. Early Prosecution Attempts (1982-2012)
- 1: The 'Archives of Terror', Olivier Bercault, Human Rights Watch coordinator of the case (2000- 2008).
- 2: The Making of Chad's Truth Commission, Judge Abakar Mahamat Hassan, President of the Chadian Truth Commission
- 3: Documenting Crimes and Organizing Victims in Chad, Souleymane Guengueng, Founder of the Association of Victims of Political Repression in Chad
- 4: Tenacity, Perseverance, and Imagination in the 'Private International Prosecution' of Hissène Habré, Reed Brody, Senior Counsel with Human Rights Watch and architect of Chadian victims' long campaign for justice
- 5: Defending Habré in Senegal During the Early Years, Hélene Cissé, member of Habré's defence team in the first domestic proceedings in Senegal (1999-2001)
- 6: The Belgian Investigation of the Habré Regime, Excerpt of EAC trial testimony of Daniel Fransen, Belgian Investigating Judge
- 7: In His Own Words: An Interview with Hissène Habré, Excerpted interview from La Gazette, Dakar, 2011
- B. Establishing the Court
- 8: Creating the EAC in Senegal: Perspectives from the African Union, Ben Kioko, Former Legal Counsel to the Commission of the African Union and judge on the African Court on Human and People's Rights
- 9: Arresting Habré, Marcel Mendy, Coordinator of the EAC Communications Unit
- 10: Investigations in Senegal and Chad: Cooperation and Challenges, Judge Jean Kandé, Investigating judge at the EAC
- 11: Managing the EAC, Amadou Mokhtar Seck, EAC Administration and Finance Office
- 12: Professionalizing a Political Trial: A Clerk's Perspective, Abouly Ba, clerk at the EAC
- C. The Trial
- 13: Prosecuting International Crimes in Senegal, Mbacke Fall, EAC Prosecutor
- 14: Defending Habré, Mounir Ballal, court-appointed defense lawyer before the EAC
- 15: From Victim to Witness and the Challenges of Sexual Violence Testimony, Jacqueline Moudeina, Victims' Legal Counsel before the EAC
- 16: Supporting Victims at Trial: Civil Parties' Perspective, Alain Werner and Emmanuelle Marchand, Legal consultants for Civil Parties during the trial
- 17: Can we be friends? Offering an Amicus Curiae Brief to the EAC, Kim Thuy Seelinger, Naomi Fenwick, Khaled Alrabe, UC Berkeley
- 18: The Habré Trial Judgement: A Summary of the First Instance Judgements of the EAC, Elise Le Gall, International Criminal Law expert with the EAC Office of the Prosecutor
- 19: The Habré Appeals Decision: A Summary of the Appeal Decision of the EAC, Elise Le Gall
- 20: Reflections on the Habré Appeals Decision, Judge Ouagadeye Wafi, EAC Appeals Chamber
- 21: The Real Fight Begins; Victims Struggle for an Effective Right to Reparation, Gaëlle Carayon and Jeanne Sulzer (Redress/FIDH)
- D. Beyond the Courtroom
- 22: A Donor's Perspective, Sarah Valentina Fall, Human Rights and Human Security program, Swiss Embassy in Dakar
- 23: Outreach for the EAC: An Extraordinary Experience, Franck Petit, team leader for the Outreach Consortium on the EAC
- 24: Covering Habré: The Diary of a Local Journalist, Ngoundji Dieng, Senegalese Journalist for Senegalese daily, The Quotidien
- 25: Prosecutions in Chad, Henri Thulliez, Senior coordinator for Human Rights Watch
- 26: Academia as Partner in the Habré Trial, Érick Sullivan and Fannie Lafontaine, The Clinic for International Criminal and Humanitarian Law (CDIPH), Laval University, Canada
- Part II. Reflections on the Significance of the Habré Case and Beyond
- Editors' Introduction
- A. Portraits, Positionality, Paradigms
- 27: Africa Against Global Justice? Stakes for Building a Political Sociology on the Futures of International Criminal Justice, Sara Dezalay
- 28: The Habré trial and the Malabo Protocol: An Emerging African Criminal Justice?, Ndeye Amy Ndiaye
- 29: Expertise in the Bench? The Dis-Embeddedness of International Criminal Justice, Julien Seroussi
- 30: Hybrid Justice and the Rights of the Defence: Existence at the Periphery, Dov Jacobs
- B. Institutions, Norms, and Pillars
- 31: Hybrid: A Spectrum of Possibilities, Mark Kersten and Kirsten Ainley
- 32: "Civil Law" v. "Common Law" Criminal Procedure: The Key or the Lock for ICL Success, Leila Bourguiba
- 33: The ICJ's Senegal v. Belgium Judgment and the Obligation to Prosecute or Extradite Alleged Torturers: The Case of Al Bashir and the ICC, Manuel Ventura and Victor Baiesu
- 34: Victims as a Third Party at the ICCL Empowerment of Victims?, Liesbeth Zegveld
- C. Capturing the Judicial Process: Actors and Dynamics
- 35: "We Will Not Go Away": The Participation of Victims in International Criminal Tribunals, Eric Stover and Stephen Cody
- 36: Reparations and the Habré Trial in Context, Christophe Sperfeldt
- 37: Hybrid Courts and Amicus Curiae Briefing, Sarah Williams
- 38: "Sexualized Slavery" and Customary International Law, Patricia Sellers and Jocelyn Kestenbaum
- 39: Witness Protection, Nancy Combs
- D. The Political and its Interaction: Captured Institutions?
- 40: Hissène Habré, the Little Bird on the Brance, and the Challenges of International Criminal Justice, Pierre Hazan
- 41: The ICC and Africa, Richard Goldstone
- 42: The 'Habré Effect', Universal Jurisdiction and Courts in Africa, Mia Swart
- 43: Main Challenges and the Future of International Criminal Law, William Schabas
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