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Author Guest Blogs (42)
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• Erna Paris (2)
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Author Guest Blogs: Erna Paris
Tuesday, March 25, 2008
Posted by: Erna Paris - Author of The Sun Climbs Slow
The strong response to The Sun Climbs Slow has truly surprised me. Like every author I hoped there would be interest in my book, but I hadn’t anticipated the Macleans bestseller list, especially a week in the top spot. Much of this is due to the topicality of my subject. The new International Criminal Court, which will open its doors for the first time this year, is a break-through for justice and the rule of law in a world made weary by war and the machinations of power politics. Imagine that the powerful of the world might be brought to account for their major crimes, such as fomenting genocide and crimes against humanity? This would never have happened in the past. Now, almost by chance, there is an independent tribunal to do this work.
That such a court came to be at the end of the violent 20th century was pretty much a fluke, since the world’s most powerful countries didn’t want it, for obvious reasons. (To learn more about this intriguing story you’ll need to read the book!) Like it or not, the ICC, as it is called, is now a reality. It is the newest institution in the international galaxy—and what it offers is cautious hope.
Canada has played a prominent role in bringing international criminal justice to the world stage. We have a right to be proud.
Friday, February 8, 2008
Posted by: Erna Paris - Author of The Sun Climbs Slow
George Bernard Shaw once told a friend that he was sorry to have written him such a long letter, but he just didn’t have time to write a short one. I remembered that great line when I learned that my first speaking engagement about my new book, The Sun Climbs Slow: Justice in the Age of American Empire, would be limited to fifteen minutes. I wondered how I’d be able to do justice to a book I’d worked on for more than four years in such a short time. It worked out well, I believe, but like GBS, I’m looking forward to the easier, longer variety.
I found this a highly interesting book to research and write because it’s a story that is little known: the creation of courts of international criminal justice to try the perpetrators of the worst crimes, and the take-no-hostages politics that swirl around them. If these tribunals are successful, especially the new permanent International Criminal Court in The Hague, old-style impunity for leaders who commit war crimes and crimes against humanity will at last come under threat—for the first time in history.
In retrospect, meeting some of the people who have faciliated this unprecedented development in world affairs, against the greatest of odds, was probably the highlight of my research. I was interested to discover that many of the judges of the International Criminal Court are themselves from countries where major human rights abuses have occurred. It was this primary experience that inspired them to work for justice. I’ll write more about some of these exceptional people in another post. Stay tuned.
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