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Race, Culture and Mental Illness in the International Criminal Court’s Ongwen Judgment: Biases and Blindspots
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Race, Culture and Mental Illness in the International Criminal Court’s Ongwen Judgment: Biases and Blindspots

2024 ed.

Book Details

Format Hardback or Cased Book
ISBN-10 3031736826
ISBN-13 9783031736827
Edition 2024 ed.
Publisher Springer International Publishing AG
Imprint Palgrave Macmillan
Country of Manufacture GB
Country of Publication GB
Publication Date Dec 19th, 2024
Print length 133 Pages
Weight 346 grams
Dimensions 15.30 x 21.70 x 1.60 cms
Ksh 7,200.00
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Dominic Ongwen was abducted in 1987 when he was 8 or 9 years old  by the Lord’s Resistance Army (‘LRA’) in Northern Uganda and trafficked as a child soldier; he made multiple unsuccessful attempts to escape, and finally succeeded in late 2014.  He turned himself into the International Criminal Court in 2015 and was prosecuted.  Mr. Ongwen’s defence was that he was not responsible for the crimes of the LRA, based on his mental illnesses and duress, stemming from his abduction and subsequent coercion and indoctrination under Joseph Kony within the LRA. In February 2021, the ICC’s Trial Chamber IX convicted Dominic Ongwen of 61 charges and two modes of liability and he was sentenced to 25 years incarceration. This work critiques the judicial racial and cultural biases and blindspots in the Ongwen Judgment rendered by the ICC, as related to the affirmative defences of mental disease or defect and duress and to sentencing, from the perspective of the author who served as a defence counsel in the case.

Dominic Ongwen was abducted in 1987 when he was 8 or 9 years old  by the Lord’s Resistance Army (‘LRA’) in Northern Uganda and trafficked as a child soldier; he made multiple unsuccessful attempts to escape, and finally succeeded in late 2014.  He turned himself into the International Criminal Court in 2015 and was prosecuted.  Mr. Ongwen’s defence was that he was not responsible for the crimes of the LRA, based on his mental illnesses and duress, stemming from his abduction and subsequent coercion and indoctrination under Joseph Kony within the LRA. In February 2021, the ICC’s Trial Chamber IX convicted Dominic Ongwen of 61 charges and two modes of liability and he was sentenced to 25 years incarceration.

This work critiques the judicial racial and cultural biases and blindspots in the Ongwen Judgment rendered by the ICC, as related to the affirmative defences of mental disease or defect and duress and to sentencing, from the perspective of the author who served as a defence counsel in the case.


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