Articles

A Different Kind of Court: Africa’s Support for the International Criminal Court, 1993–2003

Abstract

This article seeks to understand the contemporary crisis in Africa’s relationship with the International Criminal Court (ICC) by going back to the Court’s founding moment. It investigates African states’ participation in the creation of the ICC, asking: Which kind of international criminal court did African countries seek to establish when negotiating the Rome Statute? To understand their vision for the ICC, the article provides an interpretive and systematic analysis of statements by African diplomats on the establishment of the ICC as delivered to the UN General Assembly between 1993 and 2003. Identifying and analysing the most salient themes found in these statements, the article argues that African diplomats sought to establish a court that differed in important respects from the existing ICC. The African diplomatic vision of the ICC centred on particular understandings of universality, participation, complementarity, court independence and sovereign equality. Importantly, the creation of the ICC was never solely about justice; it was also about sovereign inequality and global order. The alternative diplomatic vision for the ICC makes sense of the contemporary critique of the ICC by the African Union and many African countries. This makes the contemporary crisis both intelligible and deep-seated.

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