The prohibition against non-consensual human experimentation has long been considered sacrosanct. It traces its legal roots to the Nuremberg trials although the ethical foundations dig much deeper. It prohibits all forms of medical and scientific experimentation on non-consenting individuals. The prohibition against non-consensual human experimentation is now well established in both national and international law. Despite its status as a fundamental and non-derogable norm, the prohibition against non-consensual human experimentation was called into question during the War on Terror by the CIA’s treatment of “high-value detainees.” Seeking to acquire actionable intelligence, the CIA tested the “theory of learned helplessness” on these detai...
Interrogation that aims to collect intelligence from the person being interrogated has received scho...
The term “torture” typically evokes images of physically brutal violence. Coercive interrogation tec...
The so called “war on terror” provides the Bush administration with a unique opportunity to both est...
The prohibition against non-consensual human experimentation has long been considered sacrosanct. It...
The outcry of torture being used during CIA interrogations of enemy combatants at Guantanamo Bay and...
Examines evidence of medical professionals monitoring the interrogations of detainees, analyzing the...
This Article is a contribution to the torture debate. It argues that the abusive interrogation tacti...
Following the September 11, 2001, attack on the United States by al Qaeda, the United States capture...
Beginning in 2002, lawyers for the Bush Administration began producing the now infamous legal memora...
Declaring a “war against terror,” the United States has detained foreign nationals suspected of terr...
While traveling through Pakistan, British resident Binyam Mohamed (Mohamed) was arrested and handed ...
This Article addresses the absence of accountability for torture in the War on Terror. Part II exami...
This paper outlines the use of state sanctioned torture since 1960 in Vietnam, Latin America, and th...
Was the Bush administration’s decision to employ “enhanced interrogation techniques” a mistake of po...
Salim v. Mitchell: A First in Accountability for Victims of the United States Torture Progra
Interrogation that aims to collect intelligence from the person being interrogated has received scho...
The term “torture” typically evokes images of physically brutal violence. Coercive interrogation tec...
The so called “war on terror” provides the Bush administration with a unique opportunity to both est...
The prohibition against non-consensual human experimentation has long been considered sacrosanct. It...
The outcry of torture being used during CIA interrogations of enemy combatants at Guantanamo Bay and...
Examines evidence of medical professionals monitoring the interrogations of detainees, analyzing the...
This Article is a contribution to the torture debate. It argues that the abusive interrogation tacti...
Following the September 11, 2001, attack on the United States by al Qaeda, the United States capture...
Beginning in 2002, lawyers for the Bush Administration began producing the now infamous legal memora...
Declaring a “war against terror,” the United States has detained foreign nationals suspected of terr...
While traveling through Pakistan, British resident Binyam Mohamed (Mohamed) was arrested and handed ...
This Article addresses the absence of accountability for torture in the War on Terror. Part II exami...
This paper outlines the use of state sanctioned torture since 1960 in Vietnam, Latin America, and th...
Was the Bush administration’s decision to employ “enhanced interrogation techniques” a mistake of po...
Salim v. Mitchell: A First in Accountability for Victims of the United States Torture Progra
Interrogation that aims to collect intelligence from the person being interrogated has received scho...
The term “torture” typically evokes images of physically brutal violence. Coercive interrogation tec...
The so called “war on terror” provides the Bush administration with a unique opportunity to both est...