‘We Chose Africa’: South Africa and the Regional Politics of Cooperation with the International Criminal Court F Boehme International Journal of Transitional Justice 11 (1), 50-70, 2017 | 43 | 2017 |
Reactive remembrance: The political struggle over apologies and reparations between Germany and Namibia for the Herero genocide F Boehme Journal of Human Rights 19 (2), 238-255, 2020 | 22 | 2020 |
Exit, voice and loyalty: state rhetoric about the International Criminal Court F Boehme The International Journal of Human Rights 22 (3), 420-445, 2018 | 17 | 2018 |
State Behavior and the International Criminal Court: Between Cooperation and Resistance F Boehme Routledge, 2022 | 5 | 2022 |
Normative Expectations and the Colonial Past: Apologies and Art Restitution to Former Colonies in France and Germany F Boehme Global Studies Quarterly 2 (4), ksac053, 2022 | 4 | 2022 |
Enabling Justice: State Cooperation with the International Criminal Court F Boehme Syracuse University, 2017 | 1 | 2017 |
Germany acknowledged colonial atrocities in Namibia as genocide. Victims’ groups want more F Boehme Monkeycage at The Washington Post, https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/, 2021 | | 2021 |
Genocide Never Sleeps: Living Law at the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda by Nigel Eltringham F Boehme Human Rights Quarterly 43 (2), 428-429, 2021 | | 2021 |
Distant Justice: The Impact of the International Criminal Court on African Politics. By Phil Clark. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2018. 392p. 34.99 paper. F Boehme Perspectives on Politics 18 (1), 328-330, 2020 | | 2020 |
Cultural Diversity and the Politics of Recognition in International Organizations F Boehme, L Burt, P Goff, A Klotz INtERNAtiONAl ORGANizAtiONS, 27, 2018 | | 2018 |