Bangor Law School and Bangor Centre for
International Law
Kindly supported by the British Academy
Proof in International Criminal Trials
27-28 June 2014
Reichel
Building, Bangor University
PROGRAMME
27 June 2014
13.00 Lunch
14.00 Welcome
14.05-15.30
Session 1: Approaches to Inference and Proof in
International Criminal Trials
Professor William Twining
(University College London) and Professor Terence Anderson (University of
Miami), ‘Application of Modified Wigmorean Analysis to ICTR Cases’
Professor Paul Roberts
(University of Nottingham), ‘Facing Facts’
Dr. Mark Klamberg (Uppsala
University), ‘Evaluating Evidence in International Criminal Trials:
Quantitative Grading, Eliminating Alternative Hypotheses or Both?’
15.30-16.00 Break
16.00-17.30
Session 2: Evaluating Evidence in International
Criminal Trials
Justice Teresa Doherty
(Special Court for Sierra Leone Residual Mechanism). ‘Listening and
Understanding: Assessing Credibility of Witnesses in the International
Tribunals’
Professor Nancy Combs
(William and Mary School of Law), ‘Fact-Finding Without Facts: The Uncertain Evidentiary
Foundations of International Criminal Convictions’
Mr Simon de Smet (International Criminal Court), ‘Are International
Crimes Justiciable? Some Thoughts on the Volume of Evidence and the Criminal
Standard of Proof’
28 June 2014
9.30-11.00
Session 3: Trends in Evidence
and Proof in the International Criminal Tribunals
Professor John Jackson (University of Nottingham), ‘To Proof or not to
Proof: Procedural Divergence, Cultural Diversity, and the Integrity of Witness
Evidence within the ICC’
Mr. Oliver Windridge (International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda),
‘Inference v. Speculation: The ICTR’s Approach to Inference’
Dr. Yvonne McDermott (Bangor University), ‘(Re-)Assessing Findings of
Fact on Appeal: When does the ‘Only Reasonable Conclusion’ become
Unreasonable?’
11.00-11.30 Break
11.30-13.00
Session 4: The Challenges of
Evidence and Proof in International Criminal Law
Dr. Triestino Marinello (Edge Hill University), ‘The Confirmation of
Charges at the International Criminal Court: a Tale of Two Models’
Ms. Anna Marie Brennan (University College Cork), ‘The Complexities in
Proving a Policy to Commit Crimes Against Humanity: An Analysis of the
Pre-Trial Chamber’s Confirmation of the Charges Decision in the Gbagbo Case’
Ms. Shiri Krebs (Stanford University), ‘Naming,
Blaming and Legal Framing: Barriers to War Crimes Investigations’
13.00-13.10 Closing Remarks
13.10 Lunch
To register, please follow this link.