The article discusses international human rights laws in relation to the author\u27s claim that any legislation that is proposed and enacted to prosecute a global War on Terror should not cause statelessness. Concerns about national security and terrorism in places such as the U.S. and Great Britain are examined, along with the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) terror organization. Stateless persons and terrorist expatriation statutes in the U.S. and Great Britain are assessed
This article explores the restraints international human rights law and international humanitarian l...
The events of September 11, 2001 serve as the origin of the United States’ War on Terror as populari...
The recent assertion that current anti-terror laws are inadequate in providing the State an avenue f...
The article discusses international human rights laws in relation to the author\u27s claim that any ...
This article does more than describe British and American anti-terrorism laws; it shows how those la...
This article examines how terror non-states, such as ISIS and Boko Haram, blur the distinctions betw...
Traditional international law generally condemns acts of terrorism and violations of human rights. T...
Article by Dr Klint Alexander published in Amicus Curiae - Journal of the Society for Advanced Legal...
This paper examines the UK\u27s approach to balancing counter-terror laws with human rights and civi...
Abstract. In the article the authors analyze the scope of the American Law "on combating terrorism a...
This article aims to assess the impact that the European Convention of Human Rights, incorporated in...
Western democracies are currently facing a terrorist threat which comes mainly from their own Salafi...
In response to the growing number of foreign fighters joining international terrorist organizations ...
The threat to the UK and its Western allies from Al-Qaeda related terrorism has declined but groups ...
In the wake of September 11, many have argued that the new sense of vulnerability that we all feel c...
This article explores the restraints international human rights law and international humanitarian l...
The events of September 11, 2001 serve as the origin of the United States’ War on Terror as populari...
The recent assertion that current anti-terror laws are inadequate in providing the State an avenue f...
The article discusses international human rights laws in relation to the author\u27s claim that any ...
This article does more than describe British and American anti-terrorism laws; it shows how those la...
This article examines how terror non-states, such as ISIS and Boko Haram, blur the distinctions betw...
Traditional international law generally condemns acts of terrorism and violations of human rights. T...
Article by Dr Klint Alexander published in Amicus Curiae - Journal of the Society for Advanced Legal...
This paper examines the UK\u27s approach to balancing counter-terror laws with human rights and civi...
Abstract. In the article the authors analyze the scope of the American Law "on combating terrorism a...
This article aims to assess the impact that the European Convention of Human Rights, incorporated in...
Western democracies are currently facing a terrorist threat which comes mainly from their own Salafi...
In response to the growing number of foreign fighters joining international terrorist organizations ...
The threat to the UK and its Western allies from Al-Qaeda related terrorism has declined but groups ...
In the wake of September 11, many have argued that the new sense of vulnerability that we all feel c...
This article explores the restraints international human rights law and international humanitarian l...
The events of September 11, 2001 serve as the origin of the United States’ War on Terror as populari...
The recent assertion that current anti-terror laws are inadequate in providing the State an avenue f...