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REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Kansainoikeus - Jus gentium : No. 4. , p. 351-380. - Helsinki, 1987.
ABSTRACT: This paper examines anti-terrorist legislation in Finland and is first of all referring to laws that explicitly mention the concept of terrorism.Secondly it refers to laws which could be called exceptional legislation compared with the general legislation on police activity and the prevention, investigation, sentencing and punishing of crimes.The concept of terrorism itself is not defined in this paper.
September 11, 2001 : a turning point in international law and domestic law? / Eden, Paul (ed.) ; O'Donnell, Therese, xxiv, 856 p.. - Ardsley, NY : Transnational publ., 2005.
ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Foreword / Harry Rajak. PART I - September 11, 2001 : a turning point?:. Ch. 1. Introduction / Paul Eden and Therese O'Donnell Ch. 2. Ends and means in politics : international law as framework for political decisionmaking / Sibylle Kapferer. Ch. 3. International law and 9/11 - a comment / Philippe Sands. PART II - LEGITIMACY AND THE USE OF FORCE IN RESPONSE TO TERRORISM:. Ch. 4. A new war for a new century? : the use of force against terrorism after September 11, 2001 / Christine Gray -- Ch. 5. Risk-transfer militarism and the legitimacy of war after Iraq / Martin Shaw -- Ch. 6. Legitimacy and the use of force in response to terrorism - a comment / Simon Chesterman. PART III - THE CONCEPT OF TERRORISM AND RESPONSE TO GLOBAL TERRORISM:. Ch. 7. The concept of terrorism and responses to global terrorism : coming to terms with the empty sky / Christopher Harding. Ch. 8. The problem of the definition of terrorism in international law / John Dugard. Ch. 9. The war on terror and U.N. attempts to adopt a comprehensive convention on international terrorism / Surya P. Subedi. PART IV: MILITARY TRIBUNALS AND INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS LAW:. Ch. 10. Al Qaeda, military commissions and American self-defense / Ruth Wedgwood. Ch. 11. From Guantanamo Bay to Abu Ghraib : the applicability of international human rights law to the post-9/11 extraterritorial activities of states / Ralph Wilde. Ch. 12. The detention of Al Qaeda suspects at Guantanamo Bay : U.K. perspectives / Matthew Happold. Ch. 13. Human rights and hegemony in the war against terror / Emily Haslam. PART V: EUROPEAN AND JAPANESE RESPONSES TO SEPTEMBER 11:. Ch. 14. The European Union and the challenge of September 11, 2001 : potential and limits of a "new" actor in the fight against international terrorism / Jorg Monar. Ch. 15. Renouncing peace in a time of war - Japan's constitutional conundrum / Meryll Dean. Ch. 16. European and Japanese responses to September 11 - a comment / Hans G. Nilsson. PART VI - DOMESTIC RESPONSES - RREFUGEES, ASYLUM SEEKERS AND HUMAN RIGHTS:. Ch. 17. The rule of law in times of trouble : asylum, national security and human rights / Colin Harvey -- Ch. 18. Shifting the focus of U.S. law from liberty to security / Dinah Shelton -- Ch. 19. The Anti-terrorism, Crime and Security Act 2001 : the "response" of Great Britain's legal order to September 11, 2001 : conflicts with fundamental rights / Helen Fenwick. PART VII - INTERNATIONAL LAW IN THE LIGHT OF THE EVENTS of SEPTEMBER 11:. Ch. 20. Security Council Resolution 1373 and the constitution of the United Nations / Matthew Happold. Ch. 21. International measures to prevent and suppress the financing of terrorism / Paul Eden. Ch. 22. Iraqi sanctions, human rights and the U.N. Security Council / Therese O'Donnell. Ch. 23. Dual containment : the United States, Iraq and the U.N. Security Council / Simon Chesterman and Sebastian von Einsiedel. Ch. 24. Raising global counter-terrorism capacity : the work of the Security Council's counter-terrorism committee / Eric Donnelly. Ch. 25. 9/11 : a turning point or a tipping point? / Dominic McGoldrick.
REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT: European yearbook of minority issues [=EYMI] : vol. 3, 2003/4, p. 389-422. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2005.
Global anti-terrorism law and policy / Ramraj, Victor V. (ed.) ; Hor, Michael ; Roach, Kent, xi, 650 p.. - Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2005.
ABSTRACT: Contents:. 1. Introduction, Victor V. Ramraj, Michael Hor and Kent Roach. Part I. Theoretical Perspectives on Anti-Terrorism Law and Policy. 2. Terrorism and the counterterrorist discourse, Laura K. Donohue. 3. The question of a generic definition of terrorism under general international law C. L. Lim. 4. The state of emergency in legal theory, David Dyzenhaus. 5. Stability and flexibility: a dicey business, Oren Gross. 6. Terrorism, risk perception, and judicial review , Victor V. Ramraj. Part II. A Comparative Study of Anti-Terrorism Measures. 7. The criminal law and terrorism, Kent Roach. 8. And fairness for all? Asylum, national security, and the rule of law, Colin Harvey. 9. The financial war on terrorism, Kevin E. Davis. 10. Terrorism and technology: policy challenges and current responses, Mary W. S. Wong. 11. Recent developments relating to terrorism and aviation security, Alan Khee-Jin Tan. 12. International responses to combat maritime terrorism, Robert C. Beckman. Part III. Anti-Terrorism Law and Policy in Asia. 13. Law and terror: Singapore stories and Malaysian dilemmas Michael Hor. 14. Indonesia's anti-terrorism law, Hikmahanto Juwana. 15. The Philippines: the weakest link in the fight against terrorism?, H. Harry L. Roque, Jr. 16. Japan's response to terrorism post-9/11, Mark Fenwick. 17. Legal and institutional responses to terrorism in India, V. Vijayakumar. 18. Enacting security laws in Hong Kong Simon N.M. Young. Part IV. Regional Cooperation. 19. Southeast Asian cooperation on anti-terrorism: the dynamics and limits of regional responses Simon S. C. Tay and Tan Hsien Li. 20. Anti-terrorism law and policy: the case of the European Union, Jörg Monar. Part V. Anti-Terrorism Law and Policy in the West. 21. Legislative over-breadth, democratic failure and the judicial response: fundamental rights and the UK's anti-terrorist legal policy, Helen Fenwick and Gavin Phillipson. 22. United States responses to September 11, William C. Banks. 23. Canada's response to terrorism, Kent Roach. 24. The rule of law and the regulation of terrorism in Australia and New Zealand George Williams. Part VI. Anti-Terrorism Measures in Africa, The Middle East, and Argentina. 25. Terrorism and governance in South Africa and Eastern Africa, C. H. Powell. 26. Rocks, hard places and human rights: anti-terrorism law and policy in Arab states, Lynn Welchman. 27. Terrorism in Argentina: government as its own worst enemy William C. Banks and Alejandro D. Carrió. 28. Postscript: some recent developments, Victor V. Ramraj, Michael Hor and Kent Roach.
Human rights in the OSCE region: Europe, Central Asia and North Americaa : report 2006 (events of 2005) /, 520 p.. - Vienna : International Helsinki Federation for Human Rights (IHF), 2006.
Human rights and non-discrimination in the 'war on terror' / Moeckli, Daniel - (Oxford monographs in international law), xxvi, 271 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2008.
ABSTRACT: Contents:. 1. Introduction: Security and Liberty in an Age of (Counter-)Terrorism. I. Concepts: Anti-terrorism Regimes and Non-discrimination:. 2. Anti-terrorism Regimes: Rationale and Scope. 3. The Human Right to Non-Discrimination. II. Distinctions Based on Citizenship Status:. 4. Executive Detention of Foreign Terrorist Suspects. 5. Trial of Foreign Terrorist Suspects. III. Distinctions Based on Country of Origin, or Nationality, Race, or Religion:. 6. Selective Enforcement of Immigration Laws. 7. Selective Use of Police Powers. 8. Conclusion: The Wider Impacts of Discriminatory Anti-terrorism Measures.
ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Global good governance and good global governance, by Ferreira-Snyman and G. M. Ferreira. 2. The African peer-review mechanism and the promotion of democracy and good political governance in Africa, by André Mbata B. Mangu. 3. Good governance in international law:an Indian perspective, by KG Balakrishnan. 4. International and regional requirements for good governance and the rule of law, by Michele E. Olivier. 5. Good governance, non-state actors and international law: a cautionary note, by John King and Lauren Piera. 6. Expanding international law to non-state actors (the corporation), by Diego Quiroz. 7. The 'war on terror' in Africa in international law and state practice, by André Thomashausen. 8. Strengthening international law's capacity to govern through multilayered strategic partnerships, by Charlotte Ku. 9. Will the Cotonou agreement succeed where Lomé I-IV have failed?, by Hennie Strydom. 10. Non-state actors in inter-state litigation:beneficiaries or blameworthy?, by Natalie Klein. 11. Accountability for human rights abuses:thaking the universality, indivisibility, interdependence and interrelatedness of human rights seriously, by Evadne Grant. 12. Non-state actors in the context of refugee determination processes, with particular reference to the position of women, by Rebecca MM Wallace. 13. Governance and indigenous minorities in Australia, by Greg Marks. 14. International intellectula property norm setting:democratising the World Intellectual Property Organization?, by Coenraad Visser. 15. Environmental criteria as condition for space activities of non-state entities?, by Mahulena Hoffmann. 16. Northern NGOs, southern NGOs and international environmental law: the common interest of humankind is the interest of northern mankind!, by Werner Schoultz. 17. Environmental governance and the accountability of non-state actors in Africa: a rights-based approach, by Dejo Olowu. 18. Managing global change for sustainable development:technology, community and multilateral environmental agreeements, by Duncan French. 19. Reparation for victims of war and non-state actors?, by Rainer Hofmann. 20. Outsourcing and themilitary: implications for international humanitarian law, by MG Cowling. 21. Non-state actors and human rights in non-international armed conflicts, by Natalia Szablewska. 22. Brazil-South Africa:South-south cooperation for sustainable development, by Susana Camargo Vieira. 23. The impact of intellectual property law and policy on sustainable development, by Tana Pistorius. 24. Corporates and the flexible mechanisms in the climate change regime: the privatisation of sustainable devleopment?, by Dire Tladi. 25. A global perespective on African corporate governance: the protection of stakeholders' interests, by Irene-Marie Esser. 26. The accountability of states for human rights abuses by non-state actors during preventive HIV vaccine efficacy trials in Africa, by Annelize Nienaber. 27. Women and the United Nations: who makes who matter?, by Math Noortmann. 28. Child trafficking and article 4 of the European convention for the protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms, by Patrick Vrancken. 29. Sovereign reliance on a state of necessity: always an acceptable defence?, by EC Schlemmer. 30. The refugees act: disparity between the judiciary's management of South Africa's legal obligations towrds refugees and that of the public servants entrusted with dealing with their affairs, by Margaret Beukes. 31. Southern African events of international significance -2006, by Margaret Beukes.
A Europe of rights : the impact of the ECHR on national legal systems / Keller, Helen (ed.) ; Stone Sweet, Alec, xl, 852 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2008.
Yhdistyneet kansankunnat - järjestelmä ja toiminta yksissä kansissa / Leisma, Inka (toim.), 214 p.. - Helsinki : Suomen YK-liitto, 2009.
ABSTRACT: SISÄLTÖ:. 1. Johdanto. 2. Historia. 3. Jäsenvaltioiden YK. 4. Kansainvälinen tuomioistuin. 5. YK:n järjestöt. 6. Temaattinen toiminta. 7. Taloudellinen ja sosiaalinen kehitys. 8. Ihmisoikeudet. 9. Humanitaarinen toiminta. 10. Kansainvälinen oikeus.
Criminal jurisdiction 100 years after the 1907 Hague peace conference / Genugten, Willem J. M. van, xxiv, 350 s.. - Hague : T.M.C. Asser Press, 2009.
ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Effective remedies for all? Universalizing the battle against impunity; 2. Defining, suppressing and trying genocide - a path towards accountability and justice; 3. The need for a comprehensive anti-terrorism convention?; 4. Head of state immunity for former leaders; 5. Truth commissions, accountability and the International Criminal Court; 6. Judicial review of internationally-enacted anti-terror measures: problems and prospects; 7. Corporate liability for human rights crimes; 8. Cross-fire discussion of lessons learned from the trials of Slobodan Milosevíc, Charles Taylor, and Saddam Hussein; 9. International humanitarian intervention in the post-September 11 era; 10. The plundering of natural resources and destruction of the environment in times of armed conflict; 11. The future of the International Criminal Court; 12. Dealing with present-day conduct of hostilities.
ABSTRACT: Chapter 1: Introduction, by Martha Crenshaw. PART I: Governance, Civil Liberties, and Securitization:. Chapter 2. Counterterrorism Regimes and the Rule of Law: The Effects of Emergency Legislation on Separation of Powers, Civil Liberties, and Other Fundamental Constitutional Norms, by John E. Finn. Chapter 3: The Uses and Abuses of Terrorist Designation Lists, by Chantal de Jonge Oudraat and Jean-Luc Marret. Chapter 4: Immigration Policy as Counterterrorism: The Effects of Security on Migration and Border Control in the European Union, by Gallya Lahav. PART II: National Counterterrorism Responses:. Chapter 5: The Social Contract and the Three Types of Terrorism: Democratic Society in the United Kingdom After 9/11 and 7/7, by Dirk Haubrich. Chapter 6 : Confronting Terrorism in Northern Ireland and the Basque Country: Challenges for Democracy and Legitimacy, by Rogelio Alonso. Chapter 7: French Responses to Terrorism from the Algerian War to the Present, by Jeremy Shapiro. Chapter 8: Germany�s Response to 9/11: The Importance of Checks and Balances, by Giovanni Capoccia. Chapter 9: The Consequences of Counterterrorist Policies in Israel, by Ami Pedahzur and Arie Perliger. Chapter 10: Terrorism as Conventional Security for Democracies: America, Japan, and Military Action in the Asia-Pacific, by David Leheny.
Regaining the democratic soul? : the al Barakaat case, Sweden and the balance between targeted sanctions and human rights / Pahlmblad, Malin, x, 90 p.. - Padua : Padua Univ., 2010.
Expounding the constitution : essays in constitutional theory / Huscroft, Grant (ed.), ix, 319 p.. - Cambridge : Cambridge U. P., 2008.
ABSTRACT: Table of Contents.. PART I. Morality and the Enterprise of Interpretation:. 1. What does constitutional interpretation interpret?, by Steven D. Smith. 2. Do judges reason morally?, by Jeremy Waldron. 3. Constitutional morality and bills of rights, by W. J. Waluchow. 4. Justification and rights limitations, by Bradley W. Miller. PART II. Judicial Review, Legitimacy, and Justification:. 5. Constitutions, judicial review, moral rights, and democracy: disentangling the issues, by Larry Alexander. 6. The incoherencies of constitutional positivism, by David Dyzenhaus. 7. The travails of Justice Waldron, by James Allan. 8. Deference rather than defiance: the limits of the judicial role in constitutional adjudication, by Aileen Kavanagh. PART III. Unwritten Constitutional Principles:. 9. Constitutional justice and the concept of law, by T. R. S. Allan. 10. Written constitutions and unwritten constitutionalism, by Mark D. Walters. 11. Unwritten constitutional principles, by Jeffrey Goldsworthy.
Law, jurisprudence and human rights in Asia / Plantilla, Jefferson R. (ed.) ; Ahmad, Salbiah, xv, 358 p.. - Osaka : Asia-Pacific Human Rights Information Center (HURIGHTS OSAKA), 2011.
The ASEAN Intergovernmental Commission on Human Rights : institutionalising human rights in Southeast Asia / Tan, Hsien-Li, xiii, 308 p.. - Cambridge : Cambridge U. P., 2011.
ABSTRACT: Table of Contents:. 1. Charting the human rights institutionalisation process in Southeast Asia. 2. Enough of 'Asian values': roots of the ASEAN states' reticence towards human rights. 3. Self-determination and democracy: the human rights experiences of five ASEAN states. 4. Instituting the Regional Rights Regime: the ASEAN Intergovernmental Commission on Human Rights and the role of civil society. 5. Human rights understanding between the ASEAN region and the United Nations: convergence, regional cohesion and national responsibility. 6. The unexplored aspect of human rights: what ASEAN needs to understand about the right to development. 7. Sustaining AICHR's substantive empowerment: implementation, integration, and international law.
Human rights and empire : the political philosophy of cosmopolitanism / Douzinas, Costas, x, 323 p.. - New York : Routledge, 2010.
Justice, liberty, security : new challenges for EU external relations / Martenczuk, Bernd (ed.) ; Thiel, Servaas van - (Institute for European studies - publication series ; no. 11), 525 p.. - Brussels : VUBPRESS, 2008.
ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART I: IMMIGRATION, ASYLUM AND BORDER CONTROLS. PART II: PRIVATE LAW. PART III: CRIMINAL MATTERS. PART IV: HORIZONTAL ISSUES.

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