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In The Name Of Necessity Military Tribunals And The Loss Of American Civil Liberties 1st Edition Marouf Hasian

  • SKU: BELL-51275516
In The Name Of Necessity Military Tribunals And The Loss Of American Civil Liberties 1st Edition Marouf Hasian
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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In The Name Of Necessity Military Tribunals And The Loss Of American Civil Liberties 1st Edition Marouf Hasian instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Alabama Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 19.92 MB
Pages: 327
Author: Marouf Hasian
ISBN: 9780817386603, 0817386602
Language: English
Year: 2005
Edition: 1

Product desciption

In The Name Of Necessity Military Tribunals And The Loss Of American Civil Liberties 1st Edition Marouf Hasian by Marouf Hasian 9780817386603, 0817386602 instant download after payment.

Analyses the ways American leaders have justified the use of military tribunals, the suspension of due process, and the elimination of habeas corpus. Though the war on terrorism is said to have generated unprecedented military situations, arguments for the Patriot Act and military tribunals following 9/11 resemble many historical claims for restricting civil liberties, more often than not in the name of necessity. Marouf Hasian Jr. examines the major legal cases that show how various generations have represented the need for military tribunals, and how officials historically have applied the term OC necessity.OCO George Washington cited the necessity of martial discipline in executing the British operative Major Andr(r). Tribunals tried and convicted more than 200 Sioux warriors during the Dakota Wars. President Lincoln suspended habeas corpus for many civilian and military prisoners during the Civil War. Twentieth Century military and civilian leaders selectively drafted their own codes, leading to the execution of German saboteurs during World War II. Further, General MacArthurOCOs tribunal to investigate the wartime activities of Japanese General Yamashita raised the specter of OC victorOCOs justice, OCO anticipating the outcry that attended the Nuremberg trials. aaaaaaaaaa In those cases as in current debates about the prosecution of terrorists, Hasian argues that the past is often cited selectively, neglecting historical contexts and the controversies these cases engendered. a "

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