abstract: Since 9/11 a wide range of violent practices including indefinite detention, torture, and targeted killing have been employed by the United States and the "international community" against "international terrorism." Modern laws of war are portrayed as the bright line that distinguishes the "international community" from "unlawful combatants." The threat posed by unlawful combatants has been portrayed as so exceptionally grave that the international community is justified in the transgression of those very laws of war that constitute the distinction between "us" and "them." In consequence the efficacy of modern laws of war to provide humanitarian protections has been cast into doubt and many characterize humanitarian laws of war as...
Given the contradictory reality of a well-developed human rights and humanitarian regime alongside e...
Recent political theory has explored the idea that states reconstitute sovereign power by deciding o...
Following the 9/11 terrorist attacks, those arguing that international law cannot serve as an effect...
This Article attempts to identify and clarify what is genuinely new about the ¿new paradigm¿ of arme...
This study undertakes a genealogy of crimes against humanity. It inquires into key historical transf...
The struggle to define the contours of the legal regime and to correctly communicate those expectati...
Perhaps more than any other body of international law, jus in bello-the law of armed conflict-faces ...
The purpose of this essay, written in late 2006, is to take stock of the current application of the ...
Murder by an unprivileged belligerent is a war crime created by the United States Department of Defe...
The starting point of human rights law is the right of the individual, including the right not to be...
New security threats, which have surfaced in the past few years, are seriously jeopardizing the rele...
War is with us more than ever. This is true despite the efforts of the United Nations Charter to ban...
The unconventional nature of the September 11 terrorist attacks represent to some observers a need t...
This article challenges the prevailing view that U.S. exceptionalism provides the strongest narrat...
In all revolutionary periods customary law tends to suffer from emotional attack and from the popula...
Given the contradictory reality of a well-developed human rights and humanitarian regime alongside e...
Recent political theory has explored the idea that states reconstitute sovereign power by deciding o...
Following the 9/11 terrorist attacks, those arguing that international law cannot serve as an effect...
This Article attempts to identify and clarify what is genuinely new about the ¿new paradigm¿ of arme...
This study undertakes a genealogy of crimes against humanity. It inquires into key historical transf...
The struggle to define the contours of the legal regime and to correctly communicate those expectati...
Perhaps more than any other body of international law, jus in bello-the law of armed conflict-faces ...
The purpose of this essay, written in late 2006, is to take stock of the current application of the ...
Murder by an unprivileged belligerent is a war crime created by the United States Department of Defe...
The starting point of human rights law is the right of the individual, including the right not to be...
New security threats, which have surfaced in the past few years, are seriously jeopardizing the rele...
War is with us more than ever. This is true despite the efforts of the United Nations Charter to ban...
The unconventional nature of the September 11 terrorist attacks represent to some observers a need t...
This article challenges the prevailing view that U.S. exceptionalism provides the strongest narrat...
In all revolutionary periods customary law tends to suffer from emotional attack and from the popula...
Given the contradictory reality of a well-developed human rights and humanitarian regime alongside e...
Recent political theory has explored the idea that states reconstitute sovereign power by deciding o...
Following the 9/11 terrorist attacks, those arguing that international law cannot serve as an effect...