Lesson 11 min 20 XP
The International Criminal Court
Holding individuals accountable for the worst crimes — genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity.
What the ICC Does
The International Criminal Court, also in The Hague, prosecutes individuals — not states — for the most serious international crimes:
- Genocide: Acts intended to destroy a national, ethnic, racial, or religious group.
- Crimes against humanity: Widespread or systematic attacks against civilians (murder, enslavement, torture, apartheid).
- War crimes: Serious violations of the laws of war (targeting civilians, using prohibited weapons, torture of prisoners).
- Crime of aggression: The use of armed force by a state against another state in violation of the UN Charter.
The ICC was established by the Rome Statute (1998) and began operations in 2002. It is a court of 'last resort' — it only acts when national courts are unwilling or unable to prosecute (the 'complementarity' principle).