The International Law of Intelligence: The World of Spycraft and the Law of Nations provides a first-of-its kind exploration of the contemporary legal framework that governs peacetime intelligence operations. This doctoral project attempts to write the missing textbook on espionage to be added to the grand bookshelf of international law. It rejects decades of academic scholarship that has considered spying an extralegal construct, existing at the edge of international legitimacy, and beyond the grasp of mortal rules and regulations. This dissertation diametrically opposes this line of argumentation while maintaining a clear-eyed view of the important functions that intelligence plays in our public world order, further framing these function...
This article discusses recent upheavals in intelligence law are characterized by an increased concer...
This Article demonstrates that peacetime espionage does not benefit from permissive customary intern...
International law does not address intelligence activities explicitly, and many scholars assume that...
The International Law of Intelligence: The World of Spycraft and the Law of Nations provides a first...
Many, if not most, international legal scholars share the ominous contention that espionage, as a le...
The question before us is whether international law is useful or required to govern the covert intel...
"Presenting a thorough examination of intelligence activities in international law, Sophie Duroy pro...
This Essay, in order to offer up something to that appetite, is divided into five parts. After this ...
Presenting a thorough examination of intelligence activities in international law, Sophie Duroy prov...
This Article will focus on the narrower questions of whether obtaining secret intelligence-that is, ...
The articles in this symposium issue of the Michigan Journal of International Law represent the prod...
The United States faces an immediate and continuous threat of terrorist attack using weapons of mass...
The literature surrounding the international legality of peacetime espionage has so far centered aro...
This diploma thesis deals with intelligence gathering and its international law aspects. The main re...
As a special socio-political category, the intelligence service, with its complex and specific role,...
This article discusses recent upheavals in intelligence law are characterized by an increased concer...
This Article demonstrates that peacetime espionage does not benefit from permissive customary intern...
International law does not address intelligence activities explicitly, and many scholars assume that...
The International Law of Intelligence: The World of Spycraft and the Law of Nations provides a first...
Many, if not most, international legal scholars share the ominous contention that espionage, as a le...
The question before us is whether international law is useful or required to govern the covert intel...
"Presenting a thorough examination of intelligence activities in international law, Sophie Duroy pro...
This Essay, in order to offer up something to that appetite, is divided into five parts. After this ...
Presenting a thorough examination of intelligence activities in international law, Sophie Duroy prov...
This Article will focus on the narrower questions of whether obtaining secret intelligence-that is, ...
The articles in this symposium issue of the Michigan Journal of International Law represent the prod...
The United States faces an immediate and continuous threat of terrorist attack using weapons of mass...
The literature surrounding the international legality of peacetime espionage has so far centered aro...
This diploma thesis deals with intelligence gathering and its international law aspects. The main re...
As a special socio-political category, the intelligence service, with its complex and specific role,...
This article discusses recent upheavals in intelligence law are characterized by an increased concer...
This Article demonstrates that peacetime espionage does not benefit from permissive customary intern...
International law does not address intelligence activities explicitly, and many scholars assume that...