Author: Powell, Cathleen
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
Similar Items: 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 Paris Attach - a case for the right to self-defence?
- Self-defence against non-state actors The terrorisation by Al-Shabaab in Kenya
- Extraterritorial use of force against non-state actors and the transformation of the law of self-defence
- Battered women: self-defence and provocation
- State Recognition of Customary Land Rights in the Kenyan Rift Valley
- The (mis)use of self-defence in international law