Similar Items: Targeted killing of suspected terrorists
- The legality of targeted killing operations in Pakistan in terms of international law
- The Legality of the practice of targeted killings under International Law
- The legality of the use of force against terrorists: an examination of the United air strikes against the Islamic State in Syria
- Unleashing the robotic dogs of war : what implications does the use of unmanned predator drones for targeted killing have on the interpretation, application and formation of international law?
- Two or more wrongs make a right? – The evolution of the customary right of self-defence in the post 9/11 era, and the effect of ‘unlawful' state behaviour on the formation of custom on the right of self-defence against non-state actors
- The Court and the Killing State
Author: Powell, Cathleen
- Analysis of the possibility of, and challenges associated with, the qualification for refugee status of victims of human trafficking in South Africa
- In the light of the Crimean Crisis will International law have to accept that it is to the advantage of the citizens of Crimea that, in this case, the law of state succession applies De Facto in preference to that of occupied territory law?
- International regulation of foreign intelligence liaison
- The legality of using the United Nations Security Council to bind third parties to the Rome Statute
- Is the African Union’s decision on the ICC and the adoption of Article 46A Bis of the Protocol on Amendments to the Protocol on the Statute of the African Court of Justice and Human rights unlawful under international law?
- Redefining terrorism: can State Actors commit and be responsible for acts of terrorism?