- Preface to the third edition
- Preface to the second edition
- Author biographies
- Abbreviations
- Table of cases
- Table of treaties and conventions
- Table of national legislation
- Table of international instruments
- Table of statutes of international tribunals
- 1. Fundamentals of international criminal law
- 2. The principle of legality
- 3. The Elements of international crimes, in particular the mental element
- 4. War crimes
- 5. Crimes against humanity
- 6. Genocide
- 7. Torture and aggression
- 8. Terrorism
- 9. Perpetration: in particular joint and indirect perpetration
- 10. Omission liability and superior responsibility
- 11. Other modes of criminal liability and inchoate crimes
- 12. Justifications and excuses
- 13. Obedience to superior orders and official capacity
- 14. International criminal courts
- 15. The repression of international crimes in domestic jurisdictions
- 16. International versus national jurisdiction
- 17. Legal impediments to the exercise of criminal jurisdiction
- 18. The Adoption of the essential features of the adversarial system
- 19. General principles governing international criminal trials
- 20. Investigation and trial before international criminal courts
- 21. Appeals and enforcement
- Index
(p. 193) 11. Other modes of criminal liability and inchoate crimes
- Chapter:
- (p. 193) 11. Other modes of criminal liability and inchoate crimes
- Author(s):
Antonio Cassese
, Paola Gaeta
, Laurel Baig
, Mary Fan
, Christopher Gosnell
, and Alex Whiting
- DOI:
- 10.1093/he/9780199694921.003.0029
This chapter discusses some of the most important modes of criminal liability and inchoate offences in international criminal law (ICL). Some are well known in national jurisdictions (such as aiding and abetting) and some are more unique to ICL (such as planning or ordering). ICL also covers a limited number of inchoate crimes (preparatory criminal acts that are punishable regardless of whether the crimes are actually committed).
Access to the complete content on Law Trove requires a subscription or purchase. Public users are able to search the site and view the abstracts and keywords for each book and chapter without a subscription.
Please subscribe or login to access full text content.
If you have purchased a print title that contains an access code, please see the information provided with the code or instructions printed within the title for information about how to register your code.
For questions on access or troubleshooting, please check our FAQs, and if you can't find the answer there, please contact us.
- Preface to the third edition
- Preface to the second edition
- Author biographies
- Abbreviations
- Table of cases
- Table of treaties and conventions
- Table of national legislation
- Table of international instruments
- Table of statutes of international tribunals
- 1. Fundamentals of international criminal law
- 2. The principle of legality
- 3. The Elements of international crimes, in particular the mental element
- 4. War crimes
- 5. Crimes against humanity
- 6. Genocide
- 7. Torture and aggression
- 8. Terrorism
- 9. Perpetration: in particular joint and indirect perpetration
- 10. Omission liability and superior responsibility
- 11. Other modes of criminal liability and inchoate crimes
- 12. Justifications and excuses
- 13. Obedience to superior orders and official capacity
- 14. International criminal courts
- 15. The repression of international crimes in domestic jurisdictions
- 16. International versus national jurisdiction
- 17. Legal impediments to the exercise of criminal jurisdiction
- 18. The Adoption of the essential features of the adversarial system
- 19. General principles governing international criminal trials
- 20. Investigation and trial before international criminal courts
- 21. Appeals and enforcement
- Index