Contributors |
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iii | |
Preface |
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xvi | |
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xviii | |
Introduction: rules and international security: dilemmas of a new world order |
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1 | (1) |
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1 | (2) |
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Rules and international security |
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3 | (6) |
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9 | (4) |
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13 | (2) |
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15 | (2) |
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17 | (6) |
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PART I Rules and practices |
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23 | (46) |
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25 | (14) |
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25 | (3) |
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28 | (5) |
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Slippery slopes, inverted worlds |
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33 | (6) |
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Contextualising torture: rules and conventions in the Roman Digest |
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39 | (15) |
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40 | (3) |
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Roman judicial torture: the rules |
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43 | (3) |
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46 | (2) |
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Judicial torture and the Christians |
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48 | (3) |
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51 | (3) |
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Is torture ever justified? Torture, rights and rules from Northern Ireland to Iraq |
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54 | (15) |
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54 | (1) |
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Torture: some preliminaries |
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55 | (2) |
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57 | (2) |
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The intersection of rights and torture |
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59 | (3) |
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Prisons --- `Special Category status' |
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62 | (2) |
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64 | (5) |
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PART II Rules and legitimacy |
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69 | (34) |
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Cannon before canon: the dynamics of ad bellum rule change |
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71 | (14) |
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71 | (2) |
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Norms, rules and rule change |
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73 | (2) |
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The new norm: the R2P, failed states and the case of Afghanistan |
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75 | (3) |
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The UN and state-building, the Reform Panel's report |
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78 | (4) |
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82 | (3) |
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Preventive war a l'Americaine: in the fog of norms |
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85 | (18) |
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85 | (2) |
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The idea of prevention in the making |
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87 | (3) |
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The impact of the preventive use of force on post-9/11 politics |
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90 | (2) |
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92 | (3) |
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Untying the knot: possible scenarios for the future |
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95 | (3) |
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98 | (5) |
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PART III Rules and regulations |
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103 | (42) |
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Technology change, rule change, and the law of armed conflict |
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105 | (20) |
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Technological revolutions and ``governability'' |
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106 | (6) |
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The Hague and new weapons technologies: submarines in World War I |
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112 | (3) |
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Conventional weapons and the LOAC: blinding laser weapons |
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115 | (4) |
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119 | (6) |
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Rules and the evolution of international nuclear order |
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125 | (20) |
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The science and production systems |
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126 | (3) |
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The state system and nuclear deterrence |
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129 | (1) |
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The Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty |
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130 | (3) |
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The decay of international nuclear order after 1997 |
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133 | (7) |
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140 | (5) |
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PART IV Rules and responsibility |
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145 | (30) |
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International rules, custom, and the crime of aggression |
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147 | (15) |
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147 | (1) |
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Rules in international law |
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148 | (2) |
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Just war theory and aggression |
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150 | (3) |
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The Nuremberg ``precedent'' |
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153 | (2) |
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Jus cogens norms and the crime of aggression |
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155 | (3) |
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The rules of the international community |
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158 | (4) |
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Truth commissions and rules: justice and peace |
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162 | (13) |
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162 | (1) |
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Truth commissions and state formation |
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162 | (2) |
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164 | (2) |
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166 | (3) |
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Trust and the role of rules |
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169 | (1) |
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Conclusions: the validity of truth and reconciliation commissions |
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170 | (5) |
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175 | (31) |
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Absolute ends and dynamic rules: being political as human beings |
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177 | (18) |
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177 | (2) |
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International politics and modernity |
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179 | (3) |
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Natural law and the ``art'' of politics |
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182 | (3) |
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Objectivity, security and international affairs |
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185 | (4) |
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189 | (6) |
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Inter arma, silent leges? The political community, Supreme Emergency and the rules of war |
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195 | (11) |
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The Supreme Emergency argument |
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196 | (3) |
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Supreme Emergency and contemporary international relations |
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199 | (2) |
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The just war tradition against Supreme Emergency |
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201 | (5) |
Index |
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206 | |