The Little Engine That Could! Celebrating the 20th Anniversary of the Founding of the UN Special Court for Sierra Leone

Friday, July 1st, 2022
12:00 PM - 1:30 PM

Add to Calendar: Add to Calendar: 2022-07-01 12:00:00 2022-07-01 13:30:00 The Little Engine That Could! Celebrating the 20th Anniversary of the Founding of the UN Special Court for Sierra Leone Event Description A little over 20 years ago, the international community answered the call for justice by the people of Sierra Leone and West Africa by creating the world鈥檚 first international hybrid war crimes tribunal. Armed with a workable mandate, the Special Court for Sierra Leone achieved justice for the murder, rape, maiming and mutilation of over one million people. and took down a sitting head of state for international crimes, President Charles Taylor of Liberia.  The jurisprudence that was achieved during the three joint criminal trials of those who bore the greatest responsibility for international crimes, advanced the ability of future local, regional, and international prosecutors to account for atrocity crimes.  Join a roundtable discussion, moderated by Dean Michael Scharf of Case Western University School of Law, with those individuals who created, sustained, and accomplished that justice for the people of Sierra Leone.  For all its hard work, against tremendous odds, the Special Court earned the title of 鈥淭he Little Engine That Could鈥. Joining the roundtable to consider all this are: Ambassador Hans Corell, the Undersecretary General for Legal Affairs who drafted the creative documents for the Special Court for Sierra Leone Ambassador David Scheffer, the senior American official who led the international effort to create the Special Court for Sierra Leone Professor David Crane, the founding Chief Prosecutor of the Special Court for Sierra Leone; Brenda Hollis, a Chief Prosecutor of the Special Court for Sierra Leone Binta Manasary, the Registrar for the Special Court for Sierra Leone and current Registrar of the Residual Special Court for Sierra Leone Professor James Johnson, the current Chief Prosecutor of the Residual Special Court for Sierra Leone, Director of 星空传媒 School of Law鈥檚 Henry T. King War Crimes Research Office. CLE Reading Materials Virtual School of Law School of Law America/New_York public

Sponsored by: 星空传媒 School of Law; Public International Law and Policy Group;  American Society for International Law; and the Global Accountability Network

1.5 hours of CLE credit has been approved

Webcast Archive Content

Video: Celebrating the 20th Anniversary of the Founding of the UN Special Court for Sierra Leone

Event Description

A little over 20 years ago, the international community answered the call for justice by the people of Sierra Leone and West Africa by creating the world鈥檚 first international hybrid war crimes tribunal. Armed with a workable mandate, the Special Court for Sierra Leone achieved justice for the murder, rape, maiming and mutilation of over one million people. and took down a sitting head of state for international crimes, President Charles Taylor of Liberia.  The jurisprudence that was achieved during the three joint criminal trials of those who bore the greatest responsibility for international crimes, advanced the ability of future local, regional, and international prosecutors to account for atrocity crimes. 

Join a roundtable discussion, moderated by Dean Michael Scharf of Case Western University School of Law, with those individuals who created, sustained, and accomplished that justice for the people of Sierra Leone.  For all its hard work, against tremendous odds, the Special Court earned the title of 鈥淭he Little Engine That Could鈥.

Joining the roundtable to consider all this are:

  • Ambassador Hans Corell, the Undersecretary General for Legal Affairs who drafted the creative documents for the Special Court for Sierra Leone
  • Ambassador David Scheffer, the senior American official who led the international effort to create the Special Court for Sierra Leone
  • Professor David Crane, the founding Chief Prosecutor of the Special Court for Sierra Leone;
  • Brenda Hollis, a Chief Prosecutor of the Special Court for Sierra Leone
  • Binta Manasary, the Registrar for the Special Court for Sierra Leone and current Registrar of the Residual Special Court for Sierra Leone
  • Professor James Johnson, the current Chief Prosecutor of the Residual Special Court for Sierra Leone, Director of 星空传媒 School of Law鈥檚 Henry T. King War Crimes Research Office.

Event Location

Virtual

Law logo