The United States and the International
Criminal Court
Launched in 1998, this study brought together legal,
political, and military experts to examine the relationship of the proposed
International Criminal Court (ICC) to US national security interests. Directed
by CISS Co-chair Carl Kaysen (MIT), Sarah Sewall (Harvard University), and
Michael Scharf (New England School of Law), the project produced an Academy
Paper, as well as a full-length volume that has helped to frame ongoing debates
about the US position toward the ICC. Former President Jimmy Carter commented
that the book “gives citizens and policymakers the practical information they
need to evaluate the International Criminal Court.”
As envisioned in a 1998 treaty, signed by over 100 nations, the ICC is designed
to bring to justice individuals who commit genocide, war crimes, and crimes
against humanity. The court is emblematic of emerging international legal
trends that have significant implications for the United States’ ability to
shape the future of international law and institutions. The book highlights the
tension between a foreign policy based on strengthening collective norms and
responses and one based primarily upon unilateral actions and the use of force.
This project illuminates some of the dilemmas the United States faces as it
seeks to maintain American leadership.
Funding for the ICC project came from an anonymous
donor and from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.
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