Principles of Counter-Terrorism Law
Authors:
Gurule, Jimmy / Corn, Geoffrey S.
Edition:
1st
Copyright Date:
2011
6 chapters
have results for Jimmy Gurulé
Preface 1 result
Title Page 1 result
Acknowledgments 2 results
- Professor Jimmy Gurulé
- First, I would like to acknowledge the support provided by my coauthor. I am immensely indebted to Professor Gurulé for conceiving of this project, inviting me to participate, and offering consistently timely and salient comments on my drafts. Like my co-author, I too owe an enormous debt of gratitude to the tremendous contributions of my research assistants, all students at South Texas College of Law. Without their collective efforts, this project simply would not have come to fruition. Kareem Salem’s South Texas counterpart equally entitled to special praise is Jessica Poarch (Class of 2012). Her tireless commitment to supporting this effort was in many ways decisive. However, she was not alone in her efforts, and I simply could not have completed this project without the contributions of Lorne Brook (Class of 2012), Thomas Kelley (Class of 2012), and Nalaka Senaratne (Class 2012). Finally, I would like to especially thank all the outstanding mentors
- Open Chapter
- This discussion is taken in part from Jimmy Gurulé Unfunding Terror: The Legal Response to the Financing of Global Terrorism, 324-69 (Edward Elgar 2008), [hereinafter Unfunding Terror]. Sections 2331 and 2333 were initially enacted as the Antiterrorism Act of 1990, Pub. L. No. 101–519, § 132, 104 Stat. 2240, 2250 (1990). However, these sections were subsequently repealed and re-enacted as part of the Federal Courts Administration Act of 1992, Pub. L. No. 102–572, § 1003, 106 Stat. 4506 (1992).
- Open Chapter
- Publication Date: December 20th, 2010
- ISBN: 9780314205445
- Subject: Terrorism
- Series: Concise Hornbook Series
- Type: Hornbook Treatises
- Description: The book examines the military and law enforcement responses to international terrorism. Subjects include the legal authority to use military force; determining when the law of armed conflict comes into force; the law of targeting and how this authority is applied to terrorist operatives; preventive detention; prosecution of terrorists by military commission; the legal framework for gathering counter-terrorism intelligence information; prosecuting terrorists and their sponsors; freezing terrorist assets; and civil liability for personal injury or death caused by acts of international terrorism.