This article, published in a special post 9-11 issue of the Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy, offers a defense of the view that terrorists such as Osama Bin Laden should be tried, if captured, outside of regular US civilian courts and in some form of military commission. The article argues that terrorists should be seen as criminals as well as enemies of the United States. Criminals who are simply deviants from the domestic social order are properly dealt with within the constitutionally constituted civilian court structure. Enemies who are not also criminals - legal combatants - are properly prisoners of war. Transnational terrorists are, however, best understood as both criminals and enemies - entitled neither to the full constituti...
In considering the validity of enemy combatant status and military detention for alleged terrorist...
Following the 9/11 terrorist attacks, those arguing that international law cannot serve as an effect...
This article sets forth both principled and pragmatic arguments for the fair and humane treatment of...
This article, published in a special post 9-11 issue of the Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy, ...
In early 2002, the United States began transporting prisoners captured in Afghanistan to the naval b...
U.S. counterterrorism operations today are being carried out on an unprecedented scale. Since the at...
This Article analyzes and discusses some of the United States\u27 unilateral policies in the war on ...
The United States of America has in its custody several hundred Taliban and Al Qaeda combatants who ...
This article examines the appropriate and inappropriate role of preventive detention in responding...
The United States administration’s policy of detaining ‘unlawful enemy combatants’ at the United Sta...
Neither the law of war nor the criminal law, alone or in combination, provides an adequate legal str...
The United States administration’s policy of detaining ‘unlawful enemy combatants’ at the United Sta...
This Article argues that the issue of enemy combatant detentions should be studied through the lens ...
Global War on Terror (GWOT) has opened a new door to torture and also new frontiers of transnational...
This paper identifies and analyzes two legal questions raised by the war against the al Qaeda terror...
In considering the validity of enemy combatant status and military detention for alleged terrorist...
Following the 9/11 terrorist attacks, those arguing that international law cannot serve as an effect...
This article sets forth both principled and pragmatic arguments for the fair and humane treatment of...
This article, published in a special post 9-11 issue of the Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy, ...
In early 2002, the United States began transporting prisoners captured in Afghanistan to the naval b...
U.S. counterterrorism operations today are being carried out on an unprecedented scale. Since the at...
This Article analyzes and discusses some of the United States\u27 unilateral policies in the war on ...
The United States of America has in its custody several hundred Taliban and Al Qaeda combatants who ...
This article examines the appropriate and inappropriate role of preventive detention in responding...
The United States administration’s policy of detaining ‘unlawful enemy combatants’ at the United Sta...
Neither the law of war nor the criminal law, alone or in combination, provides an adequate legal str...
The United States administration’s policy of detaining ‘unlawful enemy combatants’ at the United Sta...
This Article argues that the issue of enemy combatant detentions should be studied through the lens ...
Global War on Terror (GWOT) has opened a new door to torture and also new frontiers of transnational...
This paper identifies and analyzes two legal questions raised by the war against the al Qaeda terror...
In considering the validity of enemy combatant status and military detention for alleged terrorist...
Following the 9/11 terrorist attacks, those arguing that international law cannot serve as an effect...
This article sets forth both principled and pragmatic arguments for the fair and humane treatment of...