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Digital Harm and International Criminal Law

Digital Harm and International Criminal Law cover

Description

This book examines the promises and perils of pursuing accountability for digital harms under international criminal law (ICL).

Technology can be used as a new method of perpetrating existing international crimes, but it can also inflict novel harms that may only be adequately addressed by the creation of a new offence.

This book analyses how harm has been understood for core international crimes and how digital harms (such as online hate speech and disinformation, sharing footage of crimes online, mass surveillance, and online sexual violence) can be encompassed within definitions of those crimes. It considers theories of criminalisation to determine why digital harms should be criminalised, and explores relevant challenges, such as whether digital harms can meet the gravity threshold under ICL.

Further, obstacles to prosecuting digital harms at international criminal courts and tribunals (ICCTs) are considered, including jurisdiction, digital evidence concerns, and cooperation between ICCTs and States, private companies, and civil society. The book concludes with two case studies-the beheading of American journalist James Foley by ISIS, which was circulated online, and the digital surveillance used against the Uyghur population in Xinjiang, China-to illustrate how digital harms may be criminalised and prosecuted in practice.

Ultimately, the book argues that digital harms are like the harms traditionally encompassed by international crimes, and that these harms should be criminalised to provide justice to victims. As technology will continue to develop and serve as a vehicle for an increasing array of harms, accounting for digital harm should be an issue at the forefront of ICL.

Accessibility Information

Additional accessibility information

  • PDF/UA-2, 1.4
  • accessibility@bloomsbury.com

Hazards

The publication contains no hazards

Support for non-visual reading

Has alternative text descriptions for images

Navigation

  • Page list to go to pages from the print source version
  • Elements such as headings, tables, etc for structured navigation
  • All or substantially all textual matter is arranged in a single logical reading order

Table of Contents

1. Introduction
2. What is Harm?
3. Harm and International Criminal Law
4. Digital Harm and International Criminal Law
5. Criminalising Digital Harm
6. Challenges of Criminalising and Adjudicating Digital Harm at International Criminal Courts and Tribunals
7. Case Studies of Digital Harm
8. Conclusion

Product details

Published 12 Nov 2026
Format Ebook (PDF)
Edition 1st
Pages 272
ISBN 9781509997756
Imprint Hart Publishing
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Author

Sarah Zarmsky

Sarah Zarmsky is Lecturer at Queen’s University Be…

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