This article examines regional organizations’ antiterrorism efforts across the globe from 1990 until 2010. Empirically, it provides a comprehensive overview of the legal responses developed. Analytically, it determines long-term patterns and regional differences in these treaties, examines bones of contention, and how these were overcome. This study shows that after the Cold War, all regions developed legal antiterrorism frameworks, but states continued to preserve their sovereignty by various means; and extraditing or trying suspects remained the compromise of choice. Importantly, these antiterrorism efforts marked a watershed. Measures shifted from an approach exclusively focused on punishing and deterring terrorists toward an emphasis on...
A consideration of Terrorism and state responses under International law, looking particularly at th...
This article conducts a comparative analysis of U.S. and European counter-terrorism law and policy. ...
It is commonly believed that a state facing a terrorist threat responds with severe legislation that...
This article examines regional organizations’ antiterrorism efforts across the globe from 1990 until...
This article examines early antiterrorism negotiations within international organisations (IOs) and ...
In less than a decade 142 countries enacted or reformed more than 260 counterterrorism laws worldwid...
In the late 1960s and early 1970s, governments in North America and Western Europe faced a new trans...
This article examines early antiterrorism negotiations within international organisations (IOs) and ...
Anti-terrorism legislation drafted and enacted after 9/11 certainly carries clear signs of coordinat...
The terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, led to profound changes in societal viewpoints, politic...
This article presents a new dataset dubbed LeRIT which identifies the legislative response to intern...
Civil liberties came under pressure after Al Qaeda’s attacks in the U.S. and Europe. Governments in ...
Title from first page of PDF file (viewed November 30, 2010)Includes bibliographical references (p. ...
How far can law go to prevent violent acts of terrorism from happening? This Article examines the re...
In the international law system, internal mechanisms are the appropriate responses to terrorist acts...
A consideration of Terrorism and state responses under International law, looking particularly at th...
This article conducts a comparative analysis of U.S. and European counter-terrorism law and policy. ...
It is commonly believed that a state facing a terrorist threat responds with severe legislation that...
This article examines regional organizations’ antiterrorism efforts across the globe from 1990 until...
This article examines early antiterrorism negotiations within international organisations (IOs) and ...
In less than a decade 142 countries enacted or reformed more than 260 counterterrorism laws worldwid...
In the late 1960s and early 1970s, governments in North America and Western Europe faced a new trans...
This article examines early antiterrorism negotiations within international organisations (IOs) and ...
Anti-terrorism legislation drafted and enacted after 9/11 certainly carries clear signs of coordinat...
The terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, led to profound changes in societal viewpoints, politic...
This article presents a new dataset dubbed LeRIT which identifies the legislative response to intern...
Civil liberties came under pressure after Al Qaeda’s attacks in the U.S. and Europe. Governments in ...
Title from first page of PDF file (viewed November 30, 2010)Includes bibliographical references (p. ...
How far can law go to prevent violent acts of terrorism from happening? This Article examines the re...
In the international law system, internal mechanisms are the appropriate responses to terrorist acts...
A consideration of Terrorism and state responses under International law, looking particularly at th...
This article conducts a comparative analysis of U.S. and European counter-terrorism law and policy. ...
It is commonly believed that a state facing a terrorist threat responds with severe legislation that...