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48 Geo. Wash. Int'l L. Rev. 505 (2015-2016)
International Criminal Courts in Actions: The ICTR's Effect on Death Penalty and Reconciliation in Rwanda

handle is hein.journals/gwilr48 and id is 537 raw text is: 





      INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURTS IN ACTION: THE
                       ICTR'S EFFECT ON DEATH PENALTY AND
                                     RECONCILIATION IN RWANDA


                                                        SIGALL HOROVITZ*




                                 ABSTRACT

     This Article focuses on a major reform encouraged by the International
     Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR)-the abolition of the death pen-
     alty in Rwanda. For a decade prior to this reform, Rwandan courts had
     been imposing the death penalty in genocide cases. Using a qualitative
     empirical research method, still uncommon in international legal stud-
     ies, the Article shows how the ICTR's requirements influenced the aboli-
     tion, and then considers the impact of the abolition on national
     reconciliation in Rwanda. The findings suggest that the abolition has
     contributed to reconciliation, including through re-humanizing perpetra-
     tors and their relatives, improving survivors' perception of society, and
     inspiring both survivors and perpetrators to envision a shared future.
     This is remarkable considering that, during the debates on the ICTR's
     establishment, Rwanda insisted that sentencing genocide perpetrators to
     death was necessary for post-conflict justice and reconciliation. This
     Article thus sheds a new light on the relationship between international
     tribunals and national reconciliation. In particular, it suggests that
     international tribunals can advance national reconciliation (and thus
     attain one of their explicit goals) through encouraging domestic legal
     developments such as death penalty reforms. Moreover, by raising
     awareness of the abolition's positive effects on interethnic relations in
     Rwanda, the Article could inform debates about the future of capital
     punishment in other death penalty countries.


     *  Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Minerva Center for the Rule of Law under Extreme
Conditions, Faculty of Law and Department of Geography and Environmental Studies,
University of Haifa; Associate Research Fellow, Truman Institute for the Advancement of
Peace, Hebrew University of Jerusalem; former legal advisor at the International Criminal
Tribunal for Rwanda and the Special Court for Sierra Leone; Ph.D. 2014, Hebrew Univer-
sity; LL.M. 2003, Columbia University. This Article benefited from presentations at semi-
nars at the University of Copenhagen (Nov. 27-28, 2014), the University of Haifa (Dec. 24,
2014) and the Hebrew University (Jan. 20, 2015). I thank Yuval Shany and Victor Peskin
for their valuable remarks and encouragement, and the Minerva Center for the Rule of
Law under Extreme Conditions for supporting this research through its fellowship
program.

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