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Self-Defence in International and Criminal Law - The Doctrine of Imminence (Paperback)
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Self-Defence in International and Criminal Law - The Doctrine of Imminence (Paperback)
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Drawing from scholarship across law, history, politics and
philosophy, Self-Defence in International and Criminal Law provides
a broad and interdisciplinary approach to the doctrine of
self-defence in both domestic criminal and international law. It
focuses on the requirement of imminence, which deals with the
question of when individuals or States may legitimately resort to
defensive force against a serious danger or harm. In both national
and international law the imminence requirement, if strictly
applied, renders any defensive measure taken in anticipation of a
would-be attack illegal. Recently, however, attempts have been made
to relax the temporal requirement of the self-defence doctrine
(imminence) with a view to allowing individuals or States to employ
deadly force to arrest an anticipated threat when they 'believe'
that using 'pre-emptive' lethal force would be the only way to
thwart an expected harm. In domestic criminal law, it has been
argued that it is necessary to relax the rule of imminence in
domestic violence cases where women employ lethal force against
their abusive partners when there is no imminent threat to justify
defensive force. At the international level, while there has long
been controversy as to the justifiability of pre-emptive force in
non-confrontational settings, following the September 11 attacks,
the Bush Administration's 'war on terror' policy radically shifted
the focus from the notion of anticipation to that of prevention,
making it clear that, if necessary, it would invoke unilateral
force against emerging threats before they are fully formed. The
book surveys the roots, role, rationale, and objectives of
self-defence and questions whether the requirement of imminence
should be removed from the traditional contours of the self-defence
doctrine in national and international law.
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