The American lead War on Terrorism has provoked a lot of criticism. Notable critics like Giorgio Agamben have pointed to the War on Terrorism’s intentional undermining of the Rule of Law through the establishment of States of Exception particularly with regard to the detention center in Guantanamo Bay Cuba. This existence of this institution has been met with almost universal condemnation, with the exception of Australia and Canada. Those states seemed to abandon their citizens to Exception by Proxy. This article analyses the Guantanamo Bay detention center as an instrument of a State of Exception and the processes of Exception by Proxy that Australia and Canada participated in
This chronology of the detention of Mamdouh Habib and David Hicks covers the period from 27 Septembe...
In situations of war or emergency, as in the current 'war on terrorism', international humanitarian ...
This article argues that a concept of “empire crime” can usefully extend that of state crime to bett...
Abstract: The post 9/11 move by democracies to enact security measures which challenge both domestic...
The continuing illegal detention of two Australians, David Hicks and Mamdouh Habib, together with mo...
This article examines the influence and interpretation of international law in Australia's policy an...
Traditional analyses of Canada’s behaviour on international human rights tend to view it through the...
This contemporary comment emerged out of our interest in how issues of extraterritoriality, media an...
In Australia and other Western States, notably the participants in the United States-led |Coalition ...
The paper begins with an overview of international law and the principle of state immunity, which is...
First published by Alternative Law Journal volume 29 no. 5 page 250, who hold exclusive publishing r...
Attention has turned recently to the human rights implications of Western states ’ cooperation with ...
This paper examines Giorgio Agamben’s work on the state of exception, a top-down approach in which t...
In December 2001, the Australian 'Taliban fighter' David Hicks was captured by the Northern Alliance...
The contemporary threat of terrorism that the Western world faces is primarily from so-called “alien...
This chronology of the detention of Mamdouh Habib and David Hicks covers the period from 27 Septembe...
In situations of war or emergency, as in the current 'war on terrorism', international humanitarian ...
This article argues that a concept of “empire crime” can usefully extend that of state crime to bett...
Abstract: The post 9/11 move by democracies to enact security measures which challenge both domestic...
The continuing illegal detention of two Australians, David Hicks and Mamdouh Habib, together with mo...
This article examines the influence and interpretation of international law in Australia's policy an...
Traditional analyses of Canada’s behaviour on international human rights tend to view it through the...
This contemporary comment emerged out of our interest in how issues of extraterritoriality, media an...
In Australia and other Western States, notably the participants in the United States-led |Coalition ...
The paper begins with an overview of international law and the principle of state immunity, which is...
First published by Alternative Law Journal volume 29 no. 5 page 250, who hold exclusive publishing r...
Attention has turned recently to the human rights implications of Western states ’ cooperation with ...
This paper examines Giorgio Agamben’s work on the state of exception, a top-down approach in which t...
In December 2001, the Australian 'Taliban fighter' David Hicks was captured by the Northern Alliance...
The contemporary threat of terrorism that the Western world faces is primarily from so-called “alien...
This chronology of the detention of Mamdouh Habib and David Hicks covers the period from 27 Septembe...
In situations of war or emergency, as in the current 'war on terrorism', international humanitarian ...
This article argues that a concept of “empire crime” can usefully extend that of state crime to bett...