On August 15, 1998, a terrorist bomb exploded in Omagh, County Tyrone, Northern Ireland. The 500-pound bomb, which detonated in the main marketplace of the city, killed twenty-eight people and injured more than 200 others. Following the tragedy, Ireland\u27s Prime Minister Ahern pledged to bring those responsible to justice by making certain amendments to the Offences Against the State Act of 1939. This Note discusses whether the Prime Minister and the government of the Republic of Ireland succeeded in this task, and if their efforts conform to the Irish Constitution and the European Convention on Human Rights
They include the treatment of the issues of self-determination, consent, and the status of Northern ...
This article examines the impact of the European Court\u27s right to life jurisprudence on the issue...
The thesis unravels the strands of the political and diplomatic pressures which led to Eire's depart...
The political and social fragmentation of Northern Ireland is well known, and the violent tactics em...
Violence and terrorism - Nationalist/Catholic and Unionist/Protestant - persist in Northern Ireland ...
In the Good Friday Agreement of 1998, the Irish government committed to incorporating the European C...
This Comment will examine the domestic legislation of and the treaties between the United Kingdom, t...
Northern Ireland has been the scene of recurring and often horrifying violence since 1969, as terror...
There is nothing new in the United Kingdom about either the threat of terrorism or a legal response ...
AbstractDamache v Minister for Justice concerned a constitutional challenge to section 19 of the Iri...
This paper, which has been prepared as part of a larger research project, examines the deliberations...
Authors have argued that counterterrorism must be consistent with “the rule of law.” Often associate...
The agreement signed by the Irish and British governments and most of the political parties in North...
This paper considers the Joint Declaration in the light of recent developments in Anglo-Irish relati...
The Belfast Agreement (or Agreement ), to give it its proper name, reached at Stormont on Good Frid...
They include the treatment of the issues of self-determination, consent, and the status of Northern ...
This article examines the impact of the European Court\u27s right to life jurisprudence on the issue...
The thesis unravels the strands of the political and diplomatic pressures which led to Eire's depart...
The political and social fragmentation of Northern Ireland is well known, and the violent tactics em...
Violence and terrorism - Nationalist/Catholic and Unionist/Protestant - persist in Northern Ireland ...
In the Good Friday Agreement of 1998, the Irish government committed to incorporating the European C...
This Comment will examine the domestic legislation of and the treaties between the United Kingdom, t...
Northern Ireland has been the scene of recurring and often horrifying violence since 1969, as terror...
There is nothing new in the United Kingdom about either the threat of terrorism or a legal response ...
AbstractDamache v Minister for Justice concerned a constitutional challenge to section 19 of the Iri...
This paper, which has been prepared as part of a larger research project, examines the deliberations...
Authors have argued that counterterrorism must be consistent with “the rule of law.” Often associate...
The agreement signed by the Irish and British governments and most of the political parties in North...
This paper considers the Joint Declaration in the light of recent developments in Anglo-Irish relati...
The Belfast Agreement (or Agreement ), to give it its proper name, reached at Stormont on Good Frid...
They include the treatment of the issues of self-determination, consent, and the status of Northern ...
This article examines the impact of the European Court\u27s right to life jurisprudence on the issue...
The thesis unravels the strands of the political and diplomatic pressures which led to Eire's depart...