This article challenges the prevailing view that U.S. exceptionalism provides the strongest narrative for the U.S. rejection of Additional Protocol I to the 1949 Geneva Conventions. The United States chose not to adopt the Protocol in the face of intensive international criticism because of its policy conclusions that the text contained overly expansive provisions resulting from politicized pressure to accord protection to terrorists who elected to conduct hostile military operations outside the established legal framework. The United States concluded that the commingling of the regime criminalizing terrorist acts with the jus in bello rules of humanitarian law would be untenable and inappropriate. In effect, the U.S. concluded that key p...
Article by Dr Klint Alexander published in Amicus Curiae - Journal of the Society for Advanced Legal...
This article examines the domestic and foreign policy responses of the Bush administration to the ev...
In the aftermath of the terrorist attacks of September 11, 21, Professors Jack Goldsmith and Eric Po...
article published in law journalThis article challenges the prevailing view that U.S. "exceptionalis...
The purpose of this essay, written in late 2006, is to take stock of the current application of the ...
In the article mentioned in the title, Douglas J. Feith, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for I...
This Article attempts to identify and clarify what is genuinely new about the ¿new paradigm¿ of arme...
Following the 9/11 terrorist attacks, those arguing that international law cannot serve as an effect...
This Article discusses how continued national security exceptionalism engenders a view of the United...
abstract: Since 9/11 a wide range of violent practices including indefinite detention, torture, and ...
The UN Charter reflects the drafters’ singular focus on creating a political system to govern confli...
The United States\u27 current war on terror has been framed as a struggle for civilization ; one ...
Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions of 1949 and the interpretation given to it by many in the inter...
As the dust of the Bush administration\u27s war on terror settles, casualties are starting to appear...
This essay, originally prepared for a symposium on Guantanamo and international law, provides an bri...
Article by Dr Klint Alexander published in Amicus Curiae - Journal of the Society for Advanced Legal...
This article examines the domestic and foreign policy responses of the Bush administration to the ev...
In the aftermath of the terrorist attacks of September 11, 21, Professors Jack Goldsmith and Eric Po...
article published in law journalThis article challenges the prevailing view that U.S. "exceptionalis...
The purpose of this essay, written in late 2006, is to take stock of the current application of the ...
In the article mentioned in the title, Douglas J. Feith, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for I...
This Article attempts to identify and clarify what is genuinely new about the ¿new paradigm¿ of arme...
Following the 9/11 terrorist attacks, those arguing that international law cannot serve as an effect...
This Article discusses how continued national security exceptionalism engenders a view of the United...
abstract: Since 9/11 a wide range of violent practices including indefinite detention, torture, and ...
The UN Charter reflects the drafters’ singular focus on creating a political system to govern confli...
The United States\u27 current war on terror has been framed as a struggle for civilization ; one ...
Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions of 1949 and the interpretation given to it by many in the inter...
As the dust of the Bush administration\u27s war on terror settles, casualties are starting to appear...
This essay, originally prepared for a symposium on Guantanamo and international law, provides an bri...
Article by Dr Klint Alexander published in Amicus Curiae - Journal of the Society for Advanced Legal...
This article examines the domestic and foreign policy responses of the Bush administration to the ev...
In the aftermath of the terrorist attacks of September 11, 21, Professors Jack Goldsmith and Eric Po...