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Mark Osiel - The End of Reciprocity: Terror, Torture, and the Law of War - 9780521513517 - V9780521513517
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The End of Reciprocity: Terror, Torture, and the Law of War

€ 70.99
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Description for The End of Reciprocity: Terror, Torture, and the Law of War hardcover. This book examines reciprocity between asymmetrical sides in war and conflict. Num Pages: 676 pages. BIC Classification: LBBS. Category: (P) Professional & Vocational. Dimension: 228 x 152 x 35. Weight in Grams: 1020.
Why should America restrain itself in detaining, interrogating, and targeting terrorists when they show it no similar forbearance? Is it fair to expect one side to fight by more stringent rules than the other, placing itself at disadvantage? Is the disadvantaged side then permitted to use the tactics and strategies of its opponent? If so, then America's most controversial counterterrorism practices are justified as commensurate responses to indiscriminate terror. Yet different ethical standards prove entirely fitting, the author finds, in a conflict between a network of suicidal terrorists seeking mass atrocity at any cost and a constitutional democracy committed to ... Read more

Product Details

Format
Hardback
Publication date
2009
Publisher
Cambridge University Press United Kingdom
Number of pages
676
Condition
New
Number of Pages
676
Place of Publication
Cambridge, United Kingdom
ISBN
9780521513517
SKU
V9780521513517
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 7 to 11 working days
Ref
99-10

About Mark Osiel
Mark Osiel has written five books on the law of war, most recently Trying Tyrants: Making Sense of Mass Atrocity (Cambridge University Press, 2008) and Mass Atrocity, Ordinary Evil, and Hannah Arendt: Criminal Consciousness in Argentina's Dirty War (2002). He has lectured at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia and advised on the prosecution of General Augusto Pinochet ... Read more

Reviews for The End of Reciprocity: Terror, Torture, and the Law of War
'Many books have now been written about the law and ethics of how states should respond to terrorists who respect neither. This book may be the most impressive of them all: a hardheaded, clear-eyed, unsentimental argument for observing humanitarian restraints in the law of armed conflict even when adversaries do not. Drawing on deep reservoirs of learning in the law, ... Read more

Goodreads reviews for The End of Reciprocity: Terror, Torture, and the Law of War


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