The roots of the recent Abu Ghraib prisoner-abuse scandal lie in CIA torture techniques that have metastasized inside the U.S. intelligence community for the past fifty years. A contradictory U.S. foreign policy marked by both public opposition to torture and secret propagation of its practice has influenced American response to UN treaties, shaped federal anti-torture statutes, and produced a succession of domestic political scandals. After a crash research effort in the 1950s, the CIA developed a revolutionary new paradigm of psychological torture and then, for the next thirty years, disseminated it to allies worldwide. After September 11, the U.S. media created a public consensus for torture while the Bush administration launched a cover...
Four books written by social scientists and published in 2007 are reviewed: The Trials of Abu Ghraib...
Abstract: The treatment of detainees at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq focused worldwide media attention ...
American authorities believe torture is necessary to keep America safe from terrorists, but want to ...
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...
This paper outlines the use of state sanctioned torture since 1960 in Vietnam, Latin America, and th...
The United States’ effort to win the war on terrorism by spreading democracy served to legitimize to...
Commentators and researchers have written on the harsh and unlawful tactics that military interrogat...
This paper looks at the acceptability of torture as a national security policy to combat terrorism. ...
The prohibition against non-consensual human experimentation has long been considered sacrosanct. It...
The term “torture” typically evokes images of physically brutal violence. Coercive interrogation tec...
ABSTRACT: Following the September 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States, much support for tort...
The United States has historically been regarded as a moral leader opening the pathway for human rig...
2Since they first came to light in April 2004, the acts of torture perpetrated by U.S. soldiers in A...
abuses committed by US military on Iraqi prisoners at the CBS television show 60 Minutes II. The sca...
Four books written by social scientists and published in 2007 are reviewed: The Trials of Abu Ghraib...
Abstract: The treatment of detainees at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq focused worldwide media attention ...
American authorities believe torture is necessary to keep America safe from terrorists, but want to ...
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...
This paper outlines the use of state sanctioned torture since 1960 in Vietnam, Latin America, and th...
The United States’ effort to win the war on terrorism by spreading democracy served to legitimize to...
Commentators and researchers have written on the harsh and unlawful tactics that military interrogat...
This paper looks at the acceptability of torture as a national security policy to combat terrorism. ...
The prohibition against non-consensual human experimentation has long been considered sacrosanct. It...
The term “torture” typically evokes images of physically brutal violence. Coercive interrogation tec...
ABSTRACT: Following the September 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States, much support for tort...
The United States has historically been regarded as a moral leader opening the pathway for human rig...
2Since they first came to light in April 2004, the acts of torture perpetrated by U.S. soldiers in A...
abuses committed by US military on Iraqi prisoners at the CBS television show 60 Minutes II. The sca...
Four books written by social scientists and published in 2007 are reviewed: The Trials of Abu Ghraib...
Abstract: The treatment of detainees at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq focused worldwide media attention ...
American authorities believe torture is necessary to keep America safe from terrorists, but want to ...