"This book provides students with a critical introduction to the core elements of international criminal law. It does so by exploring the role that the law and practices of international criminal justice play in constructing international subjects and objects, including victims, defendants, states and the international community. International criminal law faces a series of challenges to its partiality and political bias. A central concern is the construction of international subjectivity. It is clear that the law and practices of international criminal justice play a crucial role in constructing international subjects and objects"--