在红色高棉进入金边 44 周年之际,布伦南中心的安德鲁-博伊尔(Andrew Boyle)讨论了他帮助起诉 1970 年代柬埔寨种族灭绝和其他反人类罪行犯罪者的工作。博伊尔详细介绍了案件、被告以及围绕法庭的争议。为什么正义需要如此长的时间?柬埔寨人对审判有何反应?种族灭绝定罪为何如此重要?
On the 44th anniversary of the Khmer Rouge entering Phnom Penh, the Brennan Center's Andrew Boyle discusses his work helping to prosecute the perpetrators of the genocide and other crimes against humanity in 1970s Cambodia. Boyle details the cases, the defendants, and the controversies surrounding the tribunal. Why did justice take so long? How did Cambodians react to the trials? And why is this genocide conviction so significant?
For more from Boyle, read his two Just Security articles on the trials. This podcast also references this Diplomat article by Peter Maguire.
Boyle also spoke on a Global Ethics Weekly podcast last month about the National Emergencies Act and Trump's policies at the U.S.-Mexico border. Boyle's focus at the Brennan Center is on executive emergency powers and separation of powers in the U.S. government.