Preemption : A Knife that Cuts Both Ways
by Dershowitz, Alan M.
Edition statement:1st Published by : W.W. Norton & Company (New York) Physical details: xii,348 Pages 22x14 cm | HB ISBN:0393060128. Year: 2006Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() |
General Stacks | 363.32 D427P 2006 (Browse shelf) | Available | 15884 | |
![]() |
General Stacks | 363.32 D427P 2006 (Browse shelf) | Available | 15377 |
Browsing Garrison Public Library Multan Shelves , Shelving location: General Stacks Close shelf browser
No cover image available | No cover image available | |||||||
363.3 D278R 1975 Riot Control | 363.3 V899N 2016 Nuclear Terrorism : Countering the Threat | 363.32 A165I 1985 Islami Riasat : Falsafa Nizam-e-Kar Aur Usool-e-Hukmarani | 363.32 D427P 2006 Preemption : A Knife that Cuts Both Ways | 363.32 D427P 2006 Preemption : A Knife that Cuts Both Ways | 363.32 G9775T 2004 Terrorism, Communalism and other Challenges to Indian Security | 363.32 M678C 2008 The Challenge of Nuclear Terror |
Include Index
When and how should democratic societies respond to potentially dangerous conduct before the conduct takes place? The latest book from this prolific defense lawyer and legal scholar examines preemptive war, preventative detention, and restrictions on dangerous speech, and claims that in the absence of general legal principles (or even a healthy debate) about preemptive action, society's current trend away from deterrence and toward prevention (as accelerated by the war on terrorism) threatens longstanding notions of individual liberty and state sovereignty. Attempting to articulate the rudiments of a jurisprudence of prevention and preemption, [the author] considers the risk calculus applied by Israel in its various preventative wars and digs into his own previous research into the problematic mathematics of prediction. Although the subject matter dovetails nicely with [his] recent work on torture and terrorism, this account conspicuously avoids those works' polemics and admits that constructing a jurisprudence for a democracy is a daunting task not well served by narrow political stances. Yet perennially provocative [he] sneaks in a punch or two, speculating aloud about the possibility of preemptive action against Iran's nuclear program and arguing that preemptive war in Iraq may have hindered preemptive action against that nation
There are no comments for this item.