Defining Terrorism in International Law
by Ben Saul 2021-06-04 16:10:56
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Despite numerous efforts since the 1920s, the international community has failed to define or criminalize ''terrorism'' in international law. This book first explores the policy reasons for defining and criminalizing terrorism, before proposing the b... Read more
Despite numerous efforts since the 1920s, the international community has failed to define or criminalize ''terrorism'' in international law. This book first explores the policy reasons for defining and criminalizing terrorism, before proposing the basic elements of an international definition.Terrorism should be defined and criminalized because it seriously undermines fundamental human rights, jeopardizes the State and peaceful politics, and may threaten international peace and security. Definition would also help to distinguish political from private violence, eliminating the overreachof the many ''sectoral'' anti-terrorism treaties. A definition may also help to confine the scope of UN Security Council resolutions since 11 September 2001, which have encouraged States to pursue unilateral and excessive counter-terrorism measures.Defining terrorism as a discrete international crime normatively recognizes and protects vital international community values and interests, symbolically expresses community condemnation, and stigmatizes offenders. Any definition of terrorism must also accommodate reasonable claims to politicalviolence, particularly against repressive governments, and this book examines the range of exceptions, justifications, excuses, defences and amnesties potentially available to terrorists, as well as purported exceptions such as self-determination struggles, ''State terrorism'' and armed conflicts.While this book seeks to minimize recourse to violence, it recognises that international law should not become complicit in oppression by criminalizing legitimate forms of political resistance. In the absence of an international definition, the remainder of the book explores how the internationalcommunity has responded to terrorism in international and ''regional'' treaties, the United Nations system, and in customary law. The final part of the book explores the distinctive prohibitions and crime of ''terrorism'' in armed conflict under international humanitarian law. Less
  • ISBN
  • 9780199535477
Author
Ben Saul is Professor of International Law and an Australian Research Council Future Fellow at the University of Sydney. Ben has expertise on global counter-terrorism law, human rights, the law of arm...
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