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The OIC, the UN, and Counter-Terrorism Law-Making - Conflicting or Cooperative Legal Orders? (Hardcover, New)
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The OIC, the UN, and Counter-Terrorism Law-Making - Conflicting or Cooperative Legal Orders? (Hardcover, New)
Series: Studies in International Law
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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The increasingly transnational nature of terrorist activities
compels the international community to strengthen the legal
framework in which counter-terrorism activities should occur at
every level, including that of intergovernmental organizations.
This unique, timely, and carefully researched monograph examines
one such important yet generally under-researched and poorly
understood intergovernmental organization, the Organization of
Islamic Cooperation ('OIC', formerly the Organization of the
Islamic Conference). In particular, it analyses in depth its
institutional counter-terrorism law-making practice, and the
relationship between resultant OIC law and comparable UN norms in
furtherance of UN Global Counter-Terrorism Stategy goals.
Furthermore, it explores two common (mis)assumptions regarding the
OIC, namely whether its internal institutional weaknesses mean that
its law-making practice is inconsequential at the intergovernmental
level; and whether its self-declared Islamic objectives and nature
are irrelevant to its institutional practice or are instead
reflected within OIC law. Where significant normative tensions are
discerned between OIC law and UN law, the monograph explores not
only whether these may be explicable, at least in part, by the
OIC's Islamic nature, and objectives, but also whether their
corresponding institutional legal orders are conflicting or
cooperative in nature, and the resultant implications of these
findings for international counter-terrorism law- and
policy-making. This monograph is expected to appeal especially to
national and intergovernmental counter-terrorism practitioners and
policy-makers, as well as to scholars concerned with the
interaction between international and Islamic law norms. From the
Foreword by Professor Ben Saul, The University of Sydney Dr Samuels
book must be commended as an original and insightful contribution
to international legal scholarship on the OIC, Islamic law,
international law, and counter-terrorism. It fills significant gaps
in legal knowledge about the vast investment of international and
regional effort that has gone into the global counter-terrorism
enterprise over many decades, and which accelerated markedly after
9/11. The scope of the book is ambitious, its subject matter is
complex, and its sources are many and diverse. Dr Samuel has
deployed an appropriate theoretical and empirical methodology,
harnessed an intricate knowledge of the field, and brought a
balanced judgement to bear, to bring these issues to life.
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