PUBLICATIONS PROF MIA SWART. Peer-Reviewed Journal Articles:

PUBLICATIONS – PROF MIA SWART Peer-Reviewed Journal Articles: 1. ‘The Prisoner Voting Dilemma: A Comparison between the Positions in the United Kingdo...
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PUBLICATIONS – PROF MIA SWART Peer-Reviewed Journal Articles: 1. ‘The Prisoner Voting Dilemma: A Comparison between the Positions in the United Kingdom and South Africa’ Journal of South African Law (forthcoming) 4 (2015). 2. ‘Requiem for a Dream? The Impact of Kiobel on Apartheid Reparations‘ Journal of International Criminal Justice 13 2 (2015) 353 -371. 3. ‘Government of the Republic of South Africa v Fick: Extending the Life of the SADC Tribunal’ South African Yearbook of International Law (2015). 4. ‘Politics Gone Cancerous: Why the Marikana Massacre Should be Prosecuted as an International Crime‘ Social Dynamics (2015). 5. ‘In the Eye of the Storm: The Kenyatta Case and the dispute between the African Union and the International Criminal Court‘ African Yearbook of International Humanitarian Law (2015) 133 – 153. 6. ‘Irreconcilable Differences? An Analysis of the Standoff between the African Union and the International Criminal Court‘ (with Karin Krisch) African Journal of International Criminal Justice 1 (2014) 38 - 57. 7. ‘Judicial Independence at the African subregional courts‘ Southern Africa Public Law 29 2 (2014) 388 - 407. 8. ‘The Road Not Taken: Separation of Powers, Interim Interdicts, Rationality Review and E-Tolling‘ (with Thomas Coggin) Constitutional Court Review 5 (2014) 346 - 366. 9. ‘The Lubanga Reparations Decision: A Missed Opportunity?‘ Polish Yearbook of International Law (2013) 169 -188. 10. ‘Apartheid Reparations: In Search of a Suitable Theoretical Foundation‘ Southern Africa Public Law (2013) 73 - 90. 11. ’The Relationship Between Legality, Legitimacy and Legacy at the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda‘ African Yearbook of International Humanitarian Law (2013) 27 - 44. 12. ‘Alternative fora for human rights protection? An evaluation of the human rights standards of the African sub-regional courts‘ Journal of South African Law (TSAR) (3) (2013). 13. ‘The Legacy of the ICTY’ Melbourne Journal of International Law 13 1 (2012). 14. ‘Tadic Revisited: Critical Comments on the Legacy and Legitimacy of the ICTY’ Göttingen Journal of International Law 3 (2011) 985 - 1009.

15. ‘The Khulumani Litigation: Complementing the Work of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’ Tilburg Law Review 16 (2011) 30 - 59. 16. ‘Reparationen als Instrument der Transitionale Gerechtigkeit: Was erklärt die Regeleinhaltung?’ Journal of International Peace and Organisation (Die FriedensWarte) (2011) 191 - 217. 17. ‘The Warning Voice from Heidelberg: Radbruch, Dugard and the Prosecution of State Injustice’ South African Journal on Human Rights 2 (2010) 272 - 291. 18. ‘Is there a Text in this Court? The Purposive Approach to Interpretation and the ad hoc Tribunals’ Heidelberg Journal of International Law (4) (2010) 767 - 789. 19. ‘Judicial Lawmaking at the ad hoc Tribunals: The Creative Use of the Sources of International Law and Adventurous Interpretation’ Heidelberg Journal of International Law (3) (2010) 459 - 487. 20. ‘The Regulation of Detention in an ‘Age of Terror’: Lessons from the Apartheid Era’ (with James Fowkes) South African Law Journal 4 (2009) 780 - 805. 21. ‘The Constitutionalisation of Diversity: an Examination of Language Rights in South Africa after the Mikro Case’ Heidelberg Journal of International Law 68 4 (2008) 1083 - 1107. 22. ‘Sorry Seems to be the Hardest Word: Apology as Form of Symbolic Reparation’ South African Journal on Human Rights 1 (2008) 50 - 70. 23. ‘Name Changes as Symbolic Reparation: the examples of South Africa and Germany’, German Law Journal (February 2008) 105 - 121. 24. ‘The Closest South Africa came to Nuremberg? The Wouter Basson Prosecution’ Heidelberg Journal of International Law 68 1 (2008) 209 -226. 25. ‘Beyond Repair: Accomplice Liability and the Apartheid Reparations Case’ SA Public Law 21 (2006) 229 - 246. 26. ‘Left Out in the Cold? Crafting Constitutional Remedies for the Poorest of the Poor’, South African Journal on Human Rights 2 (2005) 215 -24. 27. ‘Legality as Inhibitor: The Special Place of Nullum Crimen Sine Lege in the Jurisprudence of the International Criminal Tribunals’ South African Yearbook of International Law (2005)33 - 49. 28. ‘To Recuse or not to Recuse: How Independent are the Judges of the International Criminal Tribunals?’ South African Yearbook of International Law (2003) 182 - 199. 29. ‘The Carfinian Curse: The Attitudes of South African Judges Towards Women Between the Years 1900 and 1920’ South African Law Journal 3 (2003) 540 - 557.

30. ‘Democratic Republic of Congo v. Belgium: A Step Backward?’ SA Public Law 17 2 (2002) 305 – 319. ‘ 31. ‘Ad Hoc Rules for Ad Hoc Tribunals? The Rulemaking Power of the Judges of the ICTY and ICTR’ South African Journal on Human Rights 18 4 (2002) 570 - 589.

Chapters:

1. A View from the South: Towards a Multi-Layered System of International Criminal Justice' in E Ankumah (ed.) Africa and the International Criminal Court (Intersentia) (forthcoming ) (2015) 2. ’Can Sub-Regional and Regional African Courts Promote the Rule of Law?’ in Charles C. Jalloh and Olufemi Elias (eds) Shielding Humanity: Essays in International Law in Honour of Judge Abdul G Koroma (Brill Publishing) (2015). 3. ’A Grim Necessity? Why R2P-Style Intervention is Justified in Syria’ in Vasilka Sancin, Masa Kovic Dine (eds.) Responsibility to Protect in Theory and Practice (GV Publishing) (2015). 4. ”The Road to Freedom Passes through Gaol”: The Treason and Rivonia Trials as Political Trials’ in The Courtroom as Space of Resistance: Reflections 50 Years After the Rivonia Trial (Ashgate) (2015). 5. .‘The Tensions Inherent in the ICC’s Reparation Mandate’ in A Zidar, O Bekou (eds) Contemporary Challenges at the International Criminal Court (British Institute of International and Comparative Law) (2014) 159 - 177. 6. ‘Gap-filling as Lawmaking: the examples of the ad hoc International Criminal Tribunals’ in Select Proceedings of the European Society of International Law (Hart Publishing) (2010) 313 - 330. 7. ‘Social Security’ chapter 56 in S Woolman, T Roux (eds.) Constitutional Law of South Africa Volume 4 (Juta) 2006 (updated in 2012) 1 – 38.

Editorials and Other: ‘Trying Times at the Special Tribunal for Lebanon’ Journal of Civil and Legal Sciences (2014) (editorial). ‘Does the Kiobel Case Close the Door for Apartheid Reparations?’ Journal of Civil and Legal Sciences (2013) (editorial). ‘A Dismal Science No More? Reconciling Democracy, Bureaucracy and Judicial Review’ Responsa Meridiana (1997) 73 Book Reviews: 1. Shane Darcy ‘Judges, Law and War’ Leiden Journal of International Law (forthcoming) (2015 2. Charles Jalloh (ed.) The Sierra Leone Special Court and its Legacy’ South African Law Journal (forthcoming) (2015). 3. Sarah Nouwen ‘Complementarity in the Line of Fire’ South African Journal on Human Rights (2015). 4. Iain Currie & Johan de Waal ‘The Bill of Rights Handbook’ (sixth edition) Journal of South African Law 2 African Law (2014). 5. Bernard Bekink ‘Principles of Constitutional Law’; Journal of South African Law (2013). 6. Ademola Abass (ed.) ‘Protecting Human Security in Africa’; International Journal of Constitutional Law (2013). 7. Ruth Mackenzie, Penny Martin, Philippe Sands (eds.) ‘Selecting International Judges’ Leiden Journal of International Law 24 (2011) 789 - 792. 8. Ole Bubenzer ‘Post TRC Prosecutions in South Africa’ South African Journal of Human Rights 2 (2010) 592 – 595. 9. A du Bois - Pedain & F du Bois (eds.) ’Justice and Reconciliation in Post-Apartheid South Africa’; European Journal of International Law (2009). 10. Jeremy Sarkin ‘Colonial Genocide and Reparations Claims in the 21st Century, The Socio-Legal Context of Claims Under International Law by the Herero Against Germany for Genocide in Namibia’, 1904 - 1908; South African Law Journal (2009). 11. Gentian Zyberi ‘The Humanitarian Face of the International Court of Justice’; South African Journal on Human Rights 2 (2008). 12. Benjamin Goold, Liora Lazarus (eds.) ‘Security and Human Rights’; South African Law Journal 125 1 (2008).

13. Mark Lattimer, Philippe Sands (eds.) ‘Justice for Crimes Against Humanity’; South African Journal on Human Rights Part 3 (2005).

United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) Report: A Framework for Unity and Reconciliation in Palestine, Proposals for Legal Reform UNDP Report, 2015 (70 pages).

Major Conference Reports: 1.Rapid Response Seminar on Lubanga Decision, British Institute for International and Comparative Law, available at: http://www.biicl.org/files/6103_icc_7_august_2012_decision__rapid_response_seminar_ report.pdf 2.Reparations at the International Criminal Court: Issues and Challenges, Redress Conference Report (The Hague, 12 May 2011), available at http://www.redress.org/downloads/publications/SUMMARYreport.pdf