LEADER 02398cam a22004458i 4500003 hubpceuo 005 20220405151329.0 006 m | d |01 007 ta 008 210607s2021 nyu b 001 0 eng 010 2021027177 020 9781108953498 |q(ebook) 020 |z9781108844741 |q(hardback) 040 DLC |beng |cDLC |erda |dhubpceuo 041 eng 042 pcc 043 f-rw--- 050 00 KZ1201.A12 082 00 345/.0123 |223 100 1 Redwood, Henry, |d1988- |eauthor. 245 14 The archival politics of international courts / |cHenry Alexander Redwood. 260 Cambridge : |bCambridge University Press, |c2021. 263 2109 300 x, 226 p. ; |c24 cm. 337 computer 490 0 Cambridge studies in law and society 500 Based on author's thesis (doctoral - King's College London, 2018) issued under title: Accounting for violence : the production, power and ownership of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda's archive. 500 "International criminal trials produce an overwhelming volume of information. The International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda's (ICTR) judicial archive, based in Arusha, Tanzania, alone contains thousands of linear metres of documents. Sitting at the heart of the ICTR's archive is the testimony of the witnesses, which formed the main evidence base at the ICTR. This totals approximately 26,000 hours of testimony, produced by 3,200 witnesses across 6,000 trial days."--ECIP introduction. 504 Includes bibliographical references and index. 505 0 The politics of archival knowledge in international courts -- The international criminal tribunal for Rwanda -- The force of law -- Contesting the archive -- Reconstituting justice -- Imagining community -- The residual mechanism and the archive. 610 20 International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda |xArchives. 650 0 Court records |zTanzania |zArusha. 650 0 International criminal courts |zArchival resources. 880 |6245 942 |2ddc |cBK 952 |00 |10 |2ddc |40 |6345_000000000000000__0123_RED |70 |8REF |9156388OSA |bOSA |d2022-04-05 |eOSA |l0 |o345/.0123 RED |r2022-04-05 |w2022-04-05 |yBK |cReference 920 01 xeEQM7eJ 992 01 345_000000000000000__0123_RED |bWVU_ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ__ZYXW_8LM 966 |cIn the Research Room