Examines the role that international law plays in UK institutions of government when considering the deployment of armed forces to conflict and post-conflict zones. This is put into the context of the debate in the UK about the introduction of a War Powers Resolution
This article examines modern approaches to assessing the effectiveness of international legal norms,...
Foreign enlistment has made headline news in the current Syria crisis and with the rise of the terro...
The forcible protection of one states‟ own nationals on another state‟s territory is one which stre...
The government’s recent proposal for intervention in Syria was rejected by Parliament. The debate ra...
This article addresses the degree of parliamentary involvement in decisions to deploy armed forces a...
This Article considers how U.K courts might exercise review under a hypothetical British war powers...
Engaging democratically elected assemblies in national decision-making over the extraterritorial use...
The UK (as indeed the US) gave as its formal legal ground for the invasion of Iraq reliance upon int...
Examines some significant deployments of New Zealand troops overseas during the last 25 years, and s...
The use of military force is an excellent example of how the decision-making process has traditional...
What are the politics involved in a government justifying its use of military force abroad? What is ...
Parliamentary approval can be of crucial importance to ensure the democratic legitimacy of military ...
Research Highlights and Abstract: Precedents set in debates over Iraq, Libya and Syria established a...
The forcible protection of one states’ own nationals on another state’s territory is one which stret...
Those countries, including the United Kingdom, using force in Libya in 2011 have taken much greater ...
This article examines modern approaches to assessing the effectiveness of international legal norms,...
Foreign enlistment has made headline news in the current Syria crisis and with the rise of the terro...
The forcible protection of one states‟ own nationals on another state‟s territory is one which stre...
The government’s recent proposal for intervention in Syria was rejected by Parliament. The debate ra...
This article addresses the degree of parliamentary involvement in decisions to deploy armed forces a...
This Article considers how U.K courts might exercise review under a hypothetical British war powers...
Engaging democratically elected assemblies in national decision-making over the extraterritorial use...
The UK (as indeed the US) gave as its formal legal ground for the invasion of Iraq reliance upon int...
Examines some significant deployments of New Zealand troops overseas during the last 25 years, and s...
The use of military force is an excellent example of how the decision-making process has traditional...
What are the politics involved in a government justifying its use of military force abroad? What is ...
Parliamentary approval can be of crucial importance to ensure the democratic legitimacy of military ...
Research Highlights and Abstract: Precedents set in debates over Iraq, Libya and Syria established a...
The forcible protection of one states’ own nationals on another state’s territory is one which stret...
Those countries, including the United Kingdom, using force in Libya in 2011 have taken much greater ...
This article examines modern approaches to assessing the effectiveness of international legal norms,...
Foreign enlistment has made headline news in the current Syria crisis and with the rise of the terro...
The forcible protection of one states‟ own nationals on another state‟s territory is one which stre...