Table of Contents

Foreword

Preface

1 Introduction
Nicole LaViolette & Craig Forcese

2 Ottawa Principles on Anti-terrorism and Human Rights/ Les Principes d’Ottawa relatifs à la lutte au terrorisme et aux droits de l’homme

3 Defining Terrorism: The Need for a Restrained Definition
Kent Roach

4 Defining Terrorism: Why and How
C.H. Powell

5 De-militarizing Counterterrorism: Anti-Terrorism, Human Rights, and the Use of Force
Craig Forcese

6 Guarding Individual Rights in Cases Involving National Security
Lorne Waldman

7 Consular and Diplomatic Protection in an Age of Terrorism: Filling the Gaps
Gar Pardy

8 Principled Secrets in an Age of Terror: International Obligations and the Canadian Experience with the Principle of Presumed
Access
David M. Paciocco

9 Casting a Light into the Shadows: Why Security Intelligence Requires Democratic Control, Oversight, and Review
Andrea Wright

10 Beyond the Ottawa Principles: Social and Institutional Strategies and Counter-Terrorism
Victor V. Ramraj

11 Development Policy—The New Anti-Terrorism Policy?
Graham Mayeda

12 Civil Remedies for Terrorism and State Immunity
François Larocque

About the Editors and Authors

List of Participants, The Human Rights of Anti-terrorism: A Colloquium, Ottawa, 14–16 June 2006

Index

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