Abstract
Justice is, rather, subjective in nature both for those who dispense it and for those who receive it. In the modern era, courts dispense justice. Although the courts, the judges therein, and the laws thereunder, can certainly be manipulated in corrupt or authoritarian societies toward unjust ends, as was the case in Soviet Russia or Nazi Germany, liberal democracies and the international legal order attempt to deliver justice evenhandedly, dispassionately, and with an eye toward to the social good. Tribunals, both civil and criminal, are the vehicle for delivering international justice.