Impunity, international justice and the journalist’s dilemma: Philippe Sands in conversation with Reed Brody

Impunity, international justice and the journalist’s dilemma: Philippe Sands in conversation with Reed Brody


Data

Ven 17 aprile 2026

Ora inizio

18:00

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Gratuito

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In an era marked simultaneously by historic advances in international justice and by the brazen commission of atrocity crimes, journalists face a profound challenge: how to report on a global legal system whose rulings grow more progressive even as their enforcement appears increasingly fragile. In this interview, world-renowned lawyer, scholar, author and “storyteller” Philippe Sands—whose work spans the Pinochet case, the origins of crimes against humanity and genocide, and the evolving contours of accountability from Nuremberg to the present—speaks with Reed Brody, veteran investigator of dictators and counsel to atrocity survivors.
Drawing on his new book 38 Londres Street : On Impunity, Pinochet in England, and a Nazi in Patagonia, Sands will explore what the resurgence of impunity means for the press: how can reporters make sense of a world in which the International Criminal Court issues arrest warrants for Putin and Netanyahu while the invasion of Ukraine and the carnage in Gaza continue unabated? Are we witnessing the impotence of international law——or the turbulence of a system still taking shape? What should journalists know about the modern architecture of accountability: the various courts and tribunals, the distinction between crimes against humanity and genocide, head-of-state immunity, and the enduring significance of what Sands calls “the Pinochet moment”?
For journalists covering conflict and international affairs, this conversation offers a rare opportunity to hear two of the field’s most experienced practitioners reflect on the forces shaping today’s atrocity reporting. Together, Sands and Brody will discuss how reporters can navigate the gap between legal principle and political reality, and how the stories they tell can illuminate (or obscure) the struggle between accountability and impunity that defines our time.


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Pagine coinvolte
Reed Brody
Reed Brody

Reed Brody, former Advocacy Director of Human Rights Watch, has helped redefine the possibilities of transnational justice, developing innovative strategies that empower victims and reshape legal norms. Brody spent 18 years working with the survivors of Hissène Habré, the former dictator of Chad, whose 2016 conviction for crimes against humanity in Senegal marked the first and only time a former head of state was convicted of human rights crimes in the domestic courts of another country. His work on the Habré case and with the victims of Augusto Pinochet, Jean-Claude Duvalier of Haiti, and Yahya Jammeh of Gambia has been featured in five films, including The Dictator Hunter. He has uncovered U.S.-backed war crimes in Nicaragua, led United Nations missions investigating abuses in El Salvador and the Democratic Republic of Congo, and helped expose the Bush administration’s torture program in Guantánamo and Abu Ghraib. In 2024, he was appointed by the UN to investigate repression in contemporary Nicaragua. His most recent book, To Catch a Dictator (Columbia University Press, 2022), was called “an absorbing saga” (Washington Post), and “a magnificent narrative … a judicial thriller.” (le Monde).

Philippe Sands
Philippe Sands

Philippe Sands is one of the world’s leading authorities on international criminal law, human rights, and the legacy of Nuremberg. He is Professor of Public Understanding of Law at University College London and Visiting Professor of Law at Harvard Law School. Days after Russia’s full-scaled invasion of Ukraine, he launched the call for what has become the Special Tribunal for the Crime of Aggression against Ukraine. Sands has been involved in watershed cases that helped define the reach of contemporary international justice, notably the Pinochet proceedings, which transformed the global debate on universal jurisdiction and the accountability of former heads of state. He represents Gambia in the landmark genocide case at the International Court of Justice against Myanmar, and Palestine in an ICJ case on Israel’s occupation. His literary work has shaped public understanding of international law: East West Street (2016), his award-winning examination of the origins of the concepts of genocide and crimes against humanity, received the Baillie Gifford Prize, the British Book Awards Non-Fiction Book of the Year, and the Prix Montaigne. His follow-up, The Ratline (2021), chronicled the escape and evasion of a Nazi perpetrator and became a celebrated BBC podcast. His latest book, 38 Londres Street (2025), blends memoir, archival investigation, and courtroom drama to reveal the intertwined histories of Augusto Pinochet and Nazi SS officer Walter Rauff. He recently released the five-episode BBC History podcast The Arrest about the Pinochet case. Sands has served as President of English PEN, sat on the board of the Hay Festival, delivered the inaugural Nuremberg Academy Lecture, and collaborated on the performance project A Song of Good and Evil, which brings law, memory, and music into public dialogue. Today, he remains one of the most influential voices connecting the worlds of law, politics, history, and journalism.

Festival Internazionale del Giornalismo
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