16 décembre 2013

OUVRAGE : F. Ni Aoláin, O. Gross (eds.), Guantánamo and Beyond: Exceptional Courts and Military Commissions in Comparative Perspective

Catherine MAIA

The Military Commissions scheme established by President George W. Bush in November 2001 has garnered considerable controversy. In parallel with the detention facilities at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, the creation of military courts has focused significant global attention on the use of such courts to process and try persons suspected of committing terrorist acts or offenses during armed conflict. This book brings together the viewpoints of leading scholars and policy makers on the topic of exceptional courts and military commissions with a series of unique contributions setting out the current 'state of the field'. The book assesses the relationship between such courts and other intersecting and overlapping legal arenas including constitutional law, international law, international human rights law, and international humanitarian law. By examining the comparative patterns, similarities and disjunctions arising from the use of such courts, this book also analyzes the political and legal challenges that the creation and operation of exceptional courts produces both within democratic states and for the international community.


TABLE OF CONTENTS

Part I. Military Commissions and Exceptional Courts in the United States:
1. The development of an exceptional court: the history of the American military commission - David Glazier
2. Military commissions in historical perspective: lessons from the U.S. – Dakota war trials - Carol Chomsky
3. Contemporary law of war and military commissions - Gary Solis
4. Military commissions and the paradigm of prevention - David Cole
5. Prevention, detention, and extraordinariness - Fiona de Londras
6. In defense of federal criminal courts for terrorism cases in the United States - Gabor Rona and Raha Wala
7. Exceptional courts and the structure of American military justice - Stephen I. Vladeck
8. Exceptional courts in counterterrorism: lessons from the foreign intelligence surveillance act (FISA) - William C. Banks  
Part II. Exceptional Courts and Military Commissions Elsewhere:
9. The law working itself pure? The Canadian experience with exceptional courts and Guantánamo - Kent Roach
10. Vicious and virtuous cycles in prosecuting terrorism: the Diplock Court experience - John Jackson
11. Terrorism prosecution in the United Kingdom: lessons in the manipulation of criminalization and due process - Clive Walker
12. Trying terrorists: the Israeli perspective - Emmanuel Gross
13. Exceptional or not? An examination of India's special courts in the national security context - Jayanth Krishnan and Viplav Sharma
Part III. International Law, Exceptional Courts and Military Commissions:
14. The right to a fair trial in an extraordinary court - David Weissbrodt and Joseph Hansen
15. Approaches and responses of the UN human rights mechanisms to exceptional courts and military commissions - Alex Conte
16. Exceptional Courts and the European Convention on Human Rights - Steven Greer
17. The legitimacy deficit of exceptional international criminal jurisdiction - Yuval Shany


 



Fionnuala Ni AOLÁIN, Oren GROSS (eds.), Guantánamo and Beyond: Exceptional Courts and Military Commissions in Comparative Perspective, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2013 (404 pp.)

Editors
Fionnuala Ni Aoláin, University of Minnesota School of Law
Fionnuala Ní Aoláin is concurrently the Dorsey and Whitney Chair in Law at the University of Minnesota Law School and Professor of Law at the University of Ulster's Transitional Justice Institute in Belfast, Northern Ireland. Professor Ní Aoláin is the recipient of numerous academic awards and honors, including a Fulbright scholarship, the Alon Prize, the Robert Schumann Scholarship, a European Commission award, and the Lawlor fellowship. She has published extensively in the fields of emergency powers, conflict regulation, transitional justice, and sex-based violence in times of war. Her book Law in Times of Crisis (Cambridge University Press, 2006, with Oren Gross) was awarded the American Society of International Law's pre-eminent prize in 2007 – the Certificate of Merit for Pre-eminent Contribution to Creative Scholarship. She is also the author of On the Frontlines: Gender, War, and the Post-Conflict Process (2011). She was appointed to the Executive Council of the American Society of International law in 2010 for a three-year term. She is Chair of the Board for the International Women's Program OSI.

Oren Gross, University of Minnesota School of Law
Oren Gross is the Irving Younger Professor of Law and Director of the Institute for International Legal and Security Studies at the University of Minnesota Law School. Professor Gross has received numerous academic awards and scholarships, including a Fulbright scholarship and British Academy and British Council awards. Between 1986 and 1991, Professor Gross served as a senior legal advisory officer in the international law branch of the Israeli Defense Forces' Judge Advocate General's Corps. Professor Gross's work has been published extensively, and his articles have appeared in leading academic journals such as the Yale Law Journal, the Yale Journal of International Law, the Michigan Journal of International Law, the Minnesota Law Review, and the Cardozo Law Review. His book Law in Times of Crisis (Cambridge University Press, 2006, with Fionnuala Ní Aoláin) was awarded the American Society of International Law's pre-eminent prize in 2007 – the Certificate of Merit for Pre-eminent Contribution to Creative Scholarship. In 2008 he was elected as a member of the American Law Institute.

Contributors
David Glazier, Carol Chomsky, Gary Solis, David Cole, Fiona de Londras, Gabor Rona, Raha Wala, Stephen I. Vladeck, William C. Banks, Kent Roach, John Jackson, Clive Walker, Emmanuel Gross, Jayanth Krishnan, Viplav Sharma, David Weissbrodt, Joseph Hansen, Alex Conte, Steven Greer, Yuval Shany
   

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