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The Mental Element In The Rome Statute Of The International Criminal Court: A Commentary From A Comparative Criminal Law Perspective

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Correspondence to Mohamed Elewa Badar.

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Lecturer in Law, Brunel Law School, Brunel University, London; Judge, Egyptian Ministry of Justice (2002–2007); Senior Public Prosecutor, Egyptian Ministry of Justice (1997–2002). PhD (Irish Centre for Human-NUI Galway, Ireland); LLM (Irish Centre for Human Rights-NUI Galway, Ireland); Dip. in International Legal Relations (Ain-Shams University, Cairo); LLB & Bachelors of Police Sciences (Cairo). My own thinking on this work has been significantly influenced by Roger Clark’s influential article on The Mental Element in International Criminal Law: The Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court and the Elements of Offences, 12 Crim L. Forum 291 (2001). The author would like to thank Prof. William Schabas and Prof. Michael Bohlander for their valuable comments on an early draft of this work. Special thanks for Dr. Nora Karsten of the ICTY and Dr. Noelle Higgins of the Dublin City University for their comments on the final draft.

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Badar, M.E. The Mental Element In The Rome Statute Of The International Criminal Court: A Commentary From A Comparative Criminal Law Perspective. Crim Law Forum 19, 473–518 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10609-008-9085-6

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