Search: extraterritorial sanctions

...origins of U.S. thought on the applicability of human rights in armed conflict. Apart from the historical U.S. view, my suspicion is that a true empirical (both qualitative and quantitative) analysis of state practice in armed conflict would yield scant data supporting the extraterritorial applicability of most human rights law (meaning other than crimes against humanity) or its broad applicability in even internal armed conflict. If that is historically true or at least debatable, then in my humble opinion the burden is not on the Obama administration to demonstrate the...

...defendant, which in the context of the original ATS is clearly a matter of domestic common law. Instead, it is an utter lack of fidelity to first legal principles in the extraterritorial application of the ATS and the related domestic common law implementing it to foreign defendants. I had begun an article on the topic long ago but have so many other "duties as assigned" that it sits idly in a "maybe-sometime-in-the-future" draft article folder. Bemused Rob: For those of us who are non-US readers, it would be helpful to...

...documents within the United States) and therefore that part is easy. But it is also well-recognized that in limited circumstances countries can prosecute foreigners for conduct that occurs abroad (such as foreign drug cartels, foreign anti-competitive monopolies, international terrorists, etc.). The International Bar Association (on page 142 of this report) has summarized the current state of international law on this subject: "[A]lmost all states exercise ‘pure’ extraterritorial criminal jurisdiction on one or more of four principal bases: the active personality principle, the passive personality principle, the protective principle and the...

...circumstances even though the civilian was not a combatant and therefore was not subject to the laws of war. A pirate is captured. He is a civilian (or at least not recognized as a soldier) and is subject to military trial under international law though not necessarily the laws of war. A civilian provides material support to a terrorist organization. In the statute, the US asserts extraterritorial jurisdiction over this crime and will try the criminal if he subsequently comes within the jurisdiction of a US court. If he remains...

...to their disadvantage. Such is the nature of asymmetric warfare. Defining away such conflict away based on rigid adherence to formal organizational criteria will not therefore result in the extraterritorial observance of human rights law by major military powers. Rather states will continue to respond to threats in lawless regions such as FATA and the Yemeni hinterland with military means, but will do so unchecked by any law. The real choice is not between CA3 and the ICCPR, but between CA3 and no law. Kevin Jon Heller Moreover, the notion...

...South Ossetia), as well as on the extraterritorial applicability of the CERD. There's also that 2007 interstate application of Georgia against Russia before the Eur Court of Human Rights. More could happen on that front as well. Dragutin Nenezic http://www.kommersant.com/p-13069/South_Ossetia/ (August 10) Vladimir Lukin, Russian Human Rights Ombudsman, has called for the creation of an international tribunal on South Ossetia, RIA Novosti reports. Those responsible for the mass murder in the conflict zone have to be put on trial, Lukin said. The number of the dead in South Ossetia reaches...

...states, and between a state, or the citizens thereof, and foreign states, citizens or subjects." Const. Art. III § 2. Nom Err, Ben. I understand you speak in jest, but citizenship is an idependent basis for extraterritorial jurisdiction, so your citizenship makes clear you can be reached by US law even when overseas. The question is whether it applies to non-citizens when they are not within US territory. See US v. Verdugo-Urquidez, 494 U.S. 259 (1990)(Fourth Amendment does not apply to US agents breaking into a Mexican's home in Mexico)....

...yet consider the rise of universal jurisdiction over recent years all over the world, which includes African countries such as Senegal exercising universal jurisdiciton over Hissene Habre, former dictator of Chad (There is video footage of a mission of the International Federation for HUman Rights to Chad on FIDH's website, but I cannot post the link..) It also includes the US adopting relevant legislation (see Opinio Juris posts), Canada, Chile and numerous European countries (see REDRESS/ FIDH, Fostering a European Approach to Extraterritorial Jurisdiction, 2004, Fostering a European Approach to...

...have died in Iraq. We are witnessing a yearning for the domestication of war.'Here we agree! It’s a bad trend. Let’s all together try to establish a just, stable, impartial and efficient international criminal justice system, so that individual states don’t have to create their own extraterritorial prosecution rules. Wait a minute, maybe we just agree on what’s the statu quo, not on how to solve its deficiencies.'For its part, it appears that United States refused to cooperate in the Spanish investigation. Had it done so and been able to...

...Court in Quirin and Yamashita, among other cases. It also has not been superseded by domestic legislation or conventional IHL, though I wish to do more research and theoretical work on this. By the way Dave...in the follow-on article to this one I have just mentioned (which discusses the propriety of applying this domestic common law to conduct in an extraterritorial armed conflict under both domestic and itnernational law), I cite your military commissions article a fair amount. If you are interested in reviewing the next article before I submit...

...cloud' of the fighters. How do we know which cloud reigns supreme? I doubt the notion of IHL being the lex specialis would apply here. A clash of clouds and proportionality doctrines indeed. RJ1983 There equally seems to be a problem in the assumption that IHRL is applicable to the operations of a State on foreign territory. The substantive HR obligations are limited to territory and jurisdiction, and the HR bodies and courts have been very reluctant to accept extraterritorial application of human rights. Sure, HR has an impact on...

...obligations under the United Nations Charter, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and the Convention Against Torture. The article also provides an Appendix that sets forth a Torture Timeline 2001 – 2007 and addresses standards for criminal complicity that would be applicable concerning criminal or civil sanctions against members of the prior Administration who are clearly reasonably accused. [forthcoming, 18 Barry L. Rev. (2013)] The Bush-Cheney Legacy: Serial Torture and Forced Disappearance in Manifest Violation of Global Human Rights Law – Jordan J. Paust Introduction I. Rejection of...