RT Article T1 Managing expectations: international criminal trials and the prospects for deterrence of mass atrocity JF International journal of transitional justice VO 7 IS 3 SP 434 OP 454 A1 Cronin-Furman, Kate LA English YR 2013 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1843348829 AB Despite high hopes that the proliferation of international justice mechanisms represents progress toward the maintenance of international peace and security, claims about the ability of prosecutions to prevent future atrocities remain largely unexamined. These claims rely on undertheorized assumptions about both the operation of deterrence and the commission of mass atrocity. This article surveys the theory of criminal deterrence in order to assemble a more clearly specified set of expectations about how deterrence might be expected to operate in the international arena. It invokes social science findings that mass atrocity commission is motivated by different logics across cases to suggest that these differences are relevant to the potential extent of a deterrent effect. It considers the current prosecutorial policy of the International Criminal Court and suggests that, given the comparative lack of certainty and severity of sanction represented by the Court’s prosecutions, as well as the selection of perpetrators with powerful incentives to offend, current prosecutorial policy is not well-targeted at producing a deterrent effect. K1 International Criminal Court K1 Deterrence K1 Prosecutions K1 Mass atrocity DO 10.1093/ijtj/ijt016