international crime

international crime. Int’l law. A grave breach of international law, such as genocide and crimes against humanity, made punishable offenses by treaties and applicable rules of customary international law. • An international crime occurs when three conditions are satisfied: (1) the criminal norm must derive either from a treaty concluded under international law or from customary international law, and must have direct binding force on individuals without intermediate provisions of municipal law, (2) the provision must be made for the prosecution of acts penalized by international law in accordance with the principle of universal jurisdiction, so that the international character of the crime might show in the mode of prosecution itself (e.g., before the International Criminal Court), and (3) a treaty establishing liability for the act must bind the great majority of countries. — Also termed international offense. [Cases: International Law 1–2. C.J.S. International Law §§ 2–5.]
专业法律词汇 词条贡献者
译员Bernardine,毕业于英国顶尖的高级翻译学院,专注翻译各种与医疗保健及生命科学有关的法律文件。
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