Civilizing Torture amplifies the echoes of pre-9/11 American experiences with torture – dehumanization of the enemy, justifications for torture, claims of efficacy, the fleeting nature of the public debate about torture and what it meant, and more – and in so doing reminds us of how the traditional seems forever new — and so is repeated all too often
The global anti-torture norm has been one of the main examples of a global civilising process. It re...
When images of abusive and sexually-degrading behaviour by United States and British troops circulat...
This chapter, to appear in the 2nd edition of Beth Van Schaack & Ron Slye\u27s International Crimina...
To describe a work on torture as a pleasure to read risks an accusation of perversity. Yet W. Fitzhu...
"American Methods cogently gives the reader evidence of how the u.s. uses torture to control so...
Given recent revelations confirming the involvement of high-level U.S. government officials in estab...
As several scholars have argued, far from being antithetical to American values, the torture of nonw...
One of the questions raised by this important and thought-provoking collection of essays on torture ...
This thesis aims to explore why torture, deemed illegitimate by the Western world for more than a ce...
FOLLOWING THE SEPTEMBER 11 ATTACKS and the subsequent “War on Terror,” allegations of torture (or “e...
The nature of torture presupposes and negates the human capacity to imagine the suffering of the oth...
This article is about the normalization of interrogational torture and coercion from 2001 to 200...
In his paper The Logic and Language of Torture, Jonathan H. Marks explores the tragic temptation o...
Why does torture persist despite its prohibition? Scholars, policymakers, and the public have heavil...
The term “torture” typically evokes images of physically brutal violence. Coercive interrogation tec...
The global anti-torture norm has been one of the main examples of a global civilising process. It re...
When images of abusive and sexually-degrading behaviour by United States and British troops circulat...
This chapter, to appear in the 2nd edition of Beth Van Schaack & Ron Slye\u27s International Crimina...
To describe a work on torture as a pleasure to read risks an accusation of perversity. Yet W. Fitzhu...
"American Methods cogently gives the reader evidence of how the u.s. uses torture to control so...
Given recent revelations confirming the involvement of high-level U.S. government officials in estab...
As several scholars have argued, far from being antithetical to American values, the torture of nonw...
One of the questions raised by this important and thought-provoking collection of essays on torture ...
This thesis aims to explore why torture, deemed illegitimate by the Western world for more than a ce...
FOLLOWING THE SEPTEMBER 11 ATTACKS and the subsequent “War on Terror,” allegations of torture (or “e...
The nature of torture presupposes and negates the human capacity to imagine the suffering of the oth...
This article is about the normalization of interrogational torture and coercion from 2001 to 200...
In his paper The Logic and Language of Torture, Jonathan H. Marks explores the tragic temptation o...
Why does torture persist despite its prohibition? Scholars, policymakers, and the public have heavil...
The term “torture” typically evokes images of physically brutal violence. Coercive interrogation tec...
The global anti-torture norm has been one of the main examples of a global civilising process. It re...
When images of abusive and sexually-degrading behaviour by United States and British troops circulat...
This chapter, to appear in the 2nd edition of Beth Van Schaack & Ron Slye\u27s International Crimina...