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Notwithstanding the obvious lacunas and lack of documents concerning Trainin’s controversial biography, the author makes an attempt to take a fresh and independent look at Trainin’s personality and scholarship. Kisaburō Yokota (1896–1993) was one of the most influential, albeit not uncontentious, international lawyers in interwar and postwar Japan, and an eminent early champion of international criminal justice, when this was still highly unpopular in Japan. His internationalist vision inspired by Kelsen and his critique of Japan’s aggressive expansion politics in the 1930s put him in the minority. After Japan’s defeat, this earlier position stood him in good stead and he advanced to being the most influential lawyer and public intellectual in postwar Japan, advising the Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers (SCAP) as well as the Japanese government in matters of international law and criminal justice. Thus, he was a strong advocate for the Tokyo Trial of 1946–1948, published widely in support of it and also helped SCAP translate the final verdict into Japanese. The onset of the Cold War soon led to a more realistic repositioning of Yokota, but in his advocacy of international criminal justice, he remained steadfast. A study of Yokota’s writings and discussions serve to understand the historical position of Japanese lawyers and intellectuals towards the Tokyo Trial and international criminal justice even today.
International criminal justice began with efforts to prosecute Germans, including the former Emperor Wilhelm II, following the First World War. The first international trials took place at Nuremberg and Tokyo in the aftermath of the Second World War. In the early 1990s, the United Nations International law Commission submitted a draft statute for an international criminal court to the General Assembly. Subsequent work under the aegis of the Assembly culminated in the 1998 Rome Conference and adoption of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court. It entered into force in 2002. Meanwhile, several temporary international criminal tribunals were set up for situations in the former Yugoslavia, Rwanda, and Sierra Leone.
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