• process for the dispossessed: procedural rights from magna carta to modern international law

    نویسندگان :
    جزئیات بیشتر مقاله
    • تاریخ ارائه: 1392/07/24
    • تاریخ انتشار در تی پی بین: 1392/07/24
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    • تعداد پرسش و پاسخ ها: 0
    • شماره تماس دبیرخانه رویداد: -
      how oft the sight of means to do ill deeds make deeds ill done! —king john, in william shakespeare’s the life and death of king john, act iv, scene ii, 219–220 due process matters greatly to distinguished philosopher larry may, who advocates for a vigourous assertion of procedural rights as constituting an international rule of law. he undertakes this ambitious, a` la fois aspirational, task in global justice and due process. may understands due process rights as ‘‘procedural rights that set a moral minimum on what oversight is necessary for individuals who have been detained or incarcerated by governments’’ (2). for may, ‘‘international procedural rights can become the cornerstone of an ‘international’ rule of law that will cure many of the infirmities of international law today’’ (viii). may goes so far as to ensconce these rights as jus cogens, that is, peremptory norms of universal application from which no derogation is possible. he posits that the instantiation of due process through international law would have averted two decrepit infirmities: the legal black holes of guanta´namo and bagram (141–2).

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