Canada’s experience in the war against terrorism goes back to the seventies, and continues to develop nowadays, with the last direct terrorist activity in 2017. The Canadian Government reacted to these terrorist attacks by enacting a number of statutes that reflect a changing international paradigm in relation to the fight against terrorism. Fundamental rights and liberties such as the freedom of expression, the right to private life and to personal freedom have been curtailed by these legislative measures. The practical consequences of these measures are analyzed via a comparative examination of the Inter-American System of Human Rights. In general terms, the war against terrorism produces significant impacts over the human rights
The terrorist attacks that occurred in Paris on the 13th of November 2015, mark a shift for countert...
145 International Terrorism and Human Rights Terrorism has posed a threat to humans, and their lives...
This paper examines whether it is acceptable to restrict human rights in the name of combating terro...
Canada’s experience in the war against terrorism goes back to the seventies, and continues to develo...
The events of 11 September 2001 propelled the issue of global terrorism to the top of the internatio...
This essay deals with the terrorist threat in Canada and how it has been managed by the Canadian leg...
We live in a global village within which international and domestic human rights intersect and both ...
This Master's thesis examines the impact of the events of 9/11 on the discourses and practices that ...
In the late 1990s, human security was promoted as a new idea to guide the formation of Canadian fore...
On December 18, 2001, the Canadian government passed the Anti-Terrorism Act, a piece of omni-bus leg...
This study explored the balancing out of the rights associated with terrorist and counter-terrorist ...
The events of September 11, 2001 drastically altered the political climate in North America. The atm...
The current global “war on terror” highlights a fundamental quandary for all liberal democracies see...
Traditional analyses of Canada’s behaviour on international human rights tend to view it through the...
Human rights is all too often the first casualty of national insecurity. How can democracies cope wi...
The terrorist attacks that occurred in Paris on the 13th of November 2015, mark a shift for countert...
145 International Terrorism and Human Rights Terrorism has posed a threat to humans, and their lives...
This paper examines whether it is acceptable to restrict human rights in the name of combating terro...
Canada’s experience in the war against terrorism goes back to the seventies, and continues to develo...
The events of 11 September 2001 propelled the issue of global terrorism to the top of the internatio...
This essay deals with the terrorist threat in Canada and how it has been managed by the Canadian leg...
We live in a global village within which international and domestic human rights intersect and both ...
This Master's thesis examines the impact of the events of 9/11 on the discourses and practices that ...
In the late 1990s, human security was promoted as a new idea to guide the formation of Canadian fore...
On December 18, 2001, the Canadian government passed the Anti-Terrorism Act, a piece of omni-bus leg...
This study explored the balancing out of the rights associated with terrorist and counter-terrorist ...
The events of September 11, 2001 drastically altered the political climate in North America. The atm...
The current global “war on terror” highlights a fundamental quandary for all liberal democracies see...
Traditional analyses of Canada’s behaviour on international human rights tend to view it through the...
Human rights is all too often the first casualty of national insecurity. How can democracies cope wi...
The terrorist attacks that occurred in Paris on the 13th of November 2015, mark a shift for countert...
145 International Terrorism and Human Rights Terrorism has posed a threat to humans, and their lives...
This paper examines whether it is acceptable to restrict human rights in the name of combating terro...