Romanian international law expert (1897-1952) and nobel prize nominee (1926)
Vespasian V. Pella (4/17 January 1897, in Bucharest – 24 August 1952, in New York City) was a Romanian international law expert.
Legal career and opinions
During the interwar period, he promoted the notion of
international criminal proceedings against heads of state found guilty of crimes against humanity by the establishment of a special international tribunal for that purpose. In 1938 he served as President of the Committee on Legal Questions of the League of Nations.[1]
In 1944 he was appointed Romanian Ambassador to Switzerland, and in that capacity saved several Romanian Jews from deportation to Nazi occupied Poland.[3]
He kept advocating the idea of establishing an international criminal court and, in 1950, presented his proposals to that effect to the International Law Commission (UN document A/CN.4/39), which deliberated over the issue in its meetings of 5 to 6 July 1950.[4]
Works
Books
La criminalité collective des états et le droit pénal de l'avenir, Bucarest : Imprimerie de l'état, 1925
"Vers l'unification du droit pénal par la création d'un Institut international auprès de la Société des Nations", (1928) 3 Études Crimin. 49–56
La Guerre-Crime et les Criminels de Guerre, Paris, 1946
The International Association of Penal Law and the Safeguarding of Peace, Paris, 1947
Articles
"Towards an International Criminal Court" American Journal of International Law, Vol. 44, 1950, p. 37