Hervé ASCENSIO - Professor (université Paris 1)
Rafaëlle MAISON - Professor (université Paris Sud)
Gérard CAHIN - Professor (université Paris 2)
Pierre-François LAVAL - Professor (université d'Orléans)
In Rome, the delegations of the participating States agreed that the International Criminal Court (ICC) would only exercise jurisdiction regarding crimes set out in the Statute provided that these crimes were committed on the territory, on board a vessel or aircraft or by a national of a State Party, as stressed in article 12, § 2 of the Statute. This mechanism, which was drafted in the very last hours of the Conference, left open many critical issues. Since then, the scope and content of this provision is the subject of heated debate. These gaps, and the concern they raised until now, have perpetuated the persisting misunderstanding about the ICC and seem to undermine the clarity of the Court's mission. The study helps to assess the state of the law on the criminal issues that remain so far. As a first step, it aims at clarifying, on the basis of an extensive review of the case-law and practice, the concepts of territorial and personal links defined in the Rome Statute, by marking out their contours and determining their substance. Secondly, it will be demonstrated how these two grounds of jurisdiction set out in the Rome Statute allow the ICC to lawfully expand its jurisdiction, both vis-à-vis State Parties as well as non-Party States