One of the most commonly asserted justifications for denying habeas review to individuals detained by the armed forces during the Global War on Terror has been that such review is both illogical and inconsistent with the tradition of warfare because prisoners of war (POWs) have never been provided analogous access to judicial review. This view reflects a flawed assumption that the necessity for habeas access is equal for both POWs and other individuals detained as a result of their participation in armed conflict - individuals excluded from the benefits of the Geneva Convention Relative to the Treatment of Prisoners of War. Accordingly, it is not only unjustified, but distorts the underlying questions at issue in the habeas debate. This art...
The objective of this thesis is to explore and analyze some of the major difficulties, challenges, a...
The writ of habeas corpus activates courts’ duty to check arbitrary or unlawful restraints by the Ex...
For almost six years, the habeas corpus petitions brought by foreign detainees held by the United St...
One of the most commonly asserted justifications for denying habeas review to individuals detained b...
The last decade has seen intense disputes about whether alleged terrorists captured during the nontr...
The United States administration’s policy of detaining ‘unlawful enemy combatants’ at the United Sta...
This article examines whether a Detaining State is obliged to recognize prisoner of war status for i...
The United States administration’s policy of detaining ‘unlawful enemy combatants’ at the United Sta...
The United States of America has in its custody several hundred Taliban and Al Qaeda combatants who ...
The Writ of Habeas Corpus is one of the foremost rights entrenched in the Common Law System. However...
This Comment argues that the Combatant Status Review Tribunals were not competent to deny Prisoner o...
First published in 7 United States Air Force Academy Journal of Legal Studies 37 (1997
The International humanitarian law, through a set of international conventions, protects prisoners o...
We lack consensus regarding who lawfully may be held in military custody in the contexts that matter...
In 1944, in Korematsu v. United States, the Supreme Court made a major error in judgment. It ruled t...
The objective of this thesis is to explore and analyze some of the major difficulties, challenges, a...
The writ of habeas corpus activates courts’ duty to check arbitrary or unlawful restraints by the Ex...
For almost six years, the habeas corpus petitions brought by foreign detainees held by the United St...
One of the most commonly asserted justifications for denying habeas review to individuals detained b...
The last decade has seen intense disputes about whether alleged terrorists captured during the nontr...
The United States administration’s policy of detaining ‘unlawful enemy combatants’ at the United Sta...
This article examines whether a Detaining State is obliged to recognize prisoner of war status for i...
The United States administration’s policy of detaining ‘unlawful enemy combatants’ at the United Sta...
The United States of America has in its custody several hundred Taliban and Al Qaeda combatants who ...
The Writ of Habeas Corpus is one of the foremost rights entrenched in the Common Law System. However...
This Comment argues that the Combatant Status Review Tribunals were not competent to deny Prisoner o...
First published in 7 United States Air Force Academy Journal of Legal Studies 37 (1997
The International humanitarian law, through a set of international conventions, protects prisoners o...
We lack consensus regarding who lawfully may be held in military custody in the contexts that matter...
In 1944, in Korematsu v. United States, the Supreme Court made a major error in judgment. It ruled t...
The objective of this thesis is to explore and analyze some of the major difficulties, challenges, a...
The writ of habeas corpus activates courts’ duty to check arbitrary or unlawful restraints by the Ex...
For almost six years, the habeas corpus petitions brought by foreign detainees held by the United St...