Abstract
For more than 30 years the codification of state responsibility has been the main task
of the International Law Commission, which has placed greater emphasis on financial
reparations than on criminal sanctions. Since the 1990s, however, the responsibility of
individuals for gross violations of humanitarian law has been one of the main topics
in international law. This new approach implies discrepancies between domestic
practice and international case law in terms of the nature and scale of sanctions, the
role of victims and also the accountability of non-state entities, including private
companies and international organizations.