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This book engages with pivotal examples of
extraterritoriality—from Antiquity and into the twenty first
century—in order to broaden the original judicial and
geographical definition and thereby include physical and digitized
information, and visual data in particular. By focusing on a
critical incident of recent Middle Eastern history—namely,the
Gaza Freedom Flotilla of 2010 which sailed against Israel's
enduring blockade—it shows how the device of extraterritoriality
shapes not only the political situation in Gaza, the legal status
of the maritime environment in which the flotilla incident took
place, and the judicial actions taken in response but also reveals
how the concept of extraterritoriality is key to explaining the
State’s subsequent efforts to confiscate and monopolize all
visual evidence of its alleged violations of international
statutes. Through the lens of the missing visual evidence
characterizing the Mavi Marmara incident after-effects, it explores
how the legal system’s ability to evade transparency seems to be
a built-in condition for eluding criminal accountability at the
international level, with the emphasis on extraterritoriality’s
fundamental role in fashioning our current legal and political
orders.
This book engages with pivotal examples of
extraterritoriality—from Antiquity and into the twenty first
century—in order to broaden the original judicial and
geographical definition and thereby include physical and digitized
information, and visual data in particular. By focusing on a
critical incident of recent Middle Eastern history—namely,the
Gaza Freedom Flotilla of 2010 which sailed against Israel's
enduring blockade—it shows how the device of extraterritoriality
shapes not only the political situation in Gaza, the legal status
of the maritime environment in which the flotilla incident took
place, and the judicial actions taken in response but also reveals
how the concept of extraterritoriality is key to explaining the
State’s subsequent efforts to confiscate and monopolize all
visual evidence of its alleged violations of international
statutes. Through the lens of the missing visual evidence
characterizing the Mavi Marmara incident after-effects, it explores
how the legal system’s ability to evade transparency seems to be
a built-in condition for eluding criminal accountability at the
international level, with the emphasis on extraterritoriality’s
fundamental role in fashioning our current legal and political
orders.
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