Rome Statute provisions on the judiciary

E1007668

The Rome Statute provisions on the judiciary are the core legal rules that define the structure, powers, independence, and functioning of the International Criminal Court’s judges and judicial organs.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Rome Statute provisions on the judiciary canonical 1

Statements (50)

Predicate Object
instanceOf international criminal law rules
treaty provisions
aimsAt ensuring fair trial guarantees before the ICC
ensuring impartial adjudication of international crimes
defines composition of the Appeals Division of the ICC
composition of the Pre-Trial Division of the ICC
composition of the Presidency of the ICC
composition of the Trial Division of the ICC
functions of the Appeals Chamber of the ICC
functions of the Pre-Trial Chambers of the ICC
functions of the Presidency of the ICC
functions of the Trial Chambers of the ICC
number of ICC judges
establishes Appeals Division as a judicial organ of the ICC NERFINISHED
Pre-Trial Division as a judicial organ of the ICC NERFINISHED
Presidency as a judicial organ of the ICC
Trial Division as a judicial organ of the ICC NERFINISHED
procedure for election of ICC judges by the Assembly of States Parties
procedure for nomination of ICC judicial candidates by States Parties
guarantees judicial independence within the ICC
security of tenure for ICC judges
legalBasisFor internal judicial governance of the ICC
partOf Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court NERFINISHED
regulates appeals against decisions of ICC Pre-Trial Chambers
appeals against decisions of ICC Trial Chambers
assignment of judges to ICC divisions and chambers
conditions for judicial disqualification at the ICC
disciplinary measures against ICC judges
functioning of ICC judicial organs
independence of ICC judges
judicial control over investigations and prosecutions at the ICC
majority requirements for ICC judicial decisions
powers of ICC judges
procedure for recusal of ICC judges
quorum and decision-making of ICC Chambers
re-election eligibility of ICC judges
removal of ICC judges
revision of final judgments of the ICC
separate and dissenting opinions of ICC judges
structure of the International Criminal Court judiciary
requires ICC judges not to engage in activities that are incompatible with judicial functions
ICC judges to be impartial
ICC judges to be independent NERFINISHED
ICC judges to be persons of high moral character
ICC judges to have established competence in criminal law and procedure
ICC judges to have established competence in relevant areas of international law
equitable geographical representation among ICC judges
fair representation of female and male judges
representation of principal legal systems of the world among ICC judges
sets term of office of ICC judges

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Plenary of ICC judges subjectTo Rome Statute provisions on the judiciary