Introduction; 1: The 'Netanyahu Doctrine', The National Security Strategy of the United States of America, and the invasion of Iraq; 2: United States Legal and Policy Approaches in the Global War on Terror; 3: Guantanamo: A Well-studied Trunk; 4: Experimentative Counter-Terrorism Strategies After 9/11: Limitations of Military Responses to Terrorism and Violent Extremism; 5: Interpreting - Again - the Prohibition of Torture; 6: Rendition in Extraordinary Times; 7: The US Torture of Detainees in Black Sites: A Lesson from Great Britain?; 8: Litigation Across Borders: Enforcing Human Rights in Transnational Counterterrorism Operations; 9: Groups and the War on Terror;
The book presents a timely assessment of both the human rights costs of the 'War on Terror' and the methods used to wage and relentlessly continue that War.
Satvinder Singh Juss, PhD (Cantab), FRSA, is a Professor of Law at King's College London, a barrister-at-law practising from 3 Hare Court, Temple, London, and a Deputy Judge of the Upper Tribunal (IAC) in London and Birmingham. He is a former Human Rights Fellow at Harvard Law School, Boston.