The ICJ was established following the 1952 International Congress of Jurists in West Berlin. The Congress was organized by the INvestigating Committee of Free Jurists, a group of German jurists committed to investigating human rights abuse in the Soviet Zone of post-war Germany.
The ICJ is made up of fifteen judges, all elected for nine-year terms and are eligible for re-election each must be from a different nation. Five judges are elected every year to stagger the entry of new judges to maintain continuity. Some of the current judges include Peter Tomka of Slovakia, Mohamed Bennouna of Morocco, Joan Donoghue of the United States (the president), and Georg Nolte.
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