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  • Home
  • Rethinking SLIC
    • Why, what and who
    • Team
  • Individual Projects
  • Expert Group
    • Steering Board
    • Working Group 1
    • Working Group 2
    • Working Group 3
    • Working Group 4
    • Working Group 5
    • Working Group 6
  • Output
  • Blog
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export licencing

Title
An arms trade case at the International Criminal Court: Would the Article 25(3)(c) ‘purpose’ requirement really matter?
Dutch Ships in Libya: Export Licencing and State Liability
News
20.06.2025
Ava Schuster

19 June: Nicky Touw's PhD defense

In December 2019, Nicky Touw joined the Rethinking SLIC project as a PhD candidate. On Thursday, the 19th of June, she publicly defended her PhD dissertation entitled "Access to Evidence and the

Criminal law
23.07.2025
Julia Garcia Lujambio

The Easy Way Out? Common Purpose Liability for Cyber-Enabled Crimes

The use of advanced technologies to commit international crimes is increasing, and thereby raising challenges in framing new accountability mechanisms within the existing legal parameters.

Criminal law
27.05.2024
Göran Sluiter

The application for ICC arrest warrants against Netanyahu, Gallant and three Hamas leaders - a victory for justice?

On 20 May 2024, the prosecutor of the ICC, Karim Khan, announced that he has applied for arrest warrants against three Hamas leaders and Israeli Prime Minister, Netanyahu, and Defence Minister,

Criminal law
23.11.2023
Göran Sluiter

Are Dutch government officials complicit in war crimes committed by Israel?

Recent coverage by the NRC Handelsblad reveals that the Netherlands supplies spare parts for Israel's F35s – a type of combat aircraft. Despite warnings from legal advisers that through this supply

Criminal law
19.10.2023
Marc Tiernan

Are Social Media Algorithms “Passive Nonfeasance”? What Twitter v. Taamneh Got Wrong

On 18 May 2023, the U.S. Supreme Court dismissed claims that Facebook, Twitter, and Google knowingly assisted an ISIS attack on the Reina nightclub in Istanbul, Turkey in 2017. In the case Twitter,

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