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El. knyga: Extraordinary Rendition: Addressing the Challenges of Accountability

Edited by (University of Nijmegen, Netherlands), Edited by (University of North Carolina Asheville, USA), Edited by (Sciences Po, Paris, France)

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The US led programme of extraordinary rendition created profound challenges for the international system of human rights protection and rule of law. This book examines the efforts of authorities in Europe and the US to re-establish rule of law and respect for human rights through the investigation of the program and its outcomes.

The contributions to this volume examine the supranational and national inquiries into the US CIA-led extraordinary rendition and secret detention programme in Europe. The book takes as a starting point two recent and far-reaching developments in delivering accountability and establishing the truth: First, the publication of the executive summary of the US Senate Intelligence Committee (Feinstein) Report, and second, various European Court of Human Rights judgments regarding European Union Member States’ complicity with the CIA and their incompatibility with the European Convention of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (ECHR).

The collective volume provides the first stock-taking review of the state of affairs in the quest for accountability in the EU, and identifies significant obstacles to further accountability in a selection of EU member states under investigation. It will be vital reading for students and scholars in a wide range of areas, including international relations, international law, public policy and counter-terrorism studies.

List of illustrations
vii
List of contributors
viii
Introduction 1(8)
Elspeth Guild
Didier Bigo
Mark Gibney
PART I The Feinstein Report and its broader implications
9(78)
1 The US Senate Select Intelligence Committee report (Feinstein Report) on the CIA extraordinary rendition programme: Perspectives from Europe
11(19)
Elspeth Guild
2 Dramaturgy of suspicion and the emergence of a transnational guild of extraction of information by torture at a distance
30(23)
Didier Bigo
3 Foreign "liaison partners" and the CIA's economy of detention
53(34)
Crofton Black
PART II Achieving accountability?
87(144)
4 Extraordinary renditions: A practice beyond traditional justice
89(33)
Arianna Vedaschi
5 The Polish roadmap to accountability: Why the implementation of Al Nashiri and Abu Zubaydah judgements is so highly problematic
122(22)
Barbara Grabowska-Moroz
6 The UK: The role of rendition and torture in the battle to end judicial deference
144(30)
Frances Webber
7 Extraordinary rendition, secrecy and the UK Security Constitution
174(28)
Eva Nanopoulos
8 The quest for absolution and immunity: Justifying past and future torture in the name of democracy
202(29)
Didier Bigo
Emmanuel-Pierre Guittet
PART III (Re-establishing the rule of law
231(66)
9 Extraordinary rendition, the American judiciary, and the failure of the "territorial" approach in both international and domestic Law
233(19)
Mark Gibney
10 Democratic oversight and the CIA's extraordinary rendition programme in Europe
252(22)
Elspeth Guild
Didier Bigo
11 The International Criminal Court Prosecutor's preliminary examination on Afghanistan and possible impacts on accountability for secret detention and rendition
274(23)
Carla Ferstman
Index 297
Didier Bigo is Professor of International Relations (and Maītre de conférences des universités) at Sciences-Po Paris, and Researcher at CERI/FNSP. Bigo is also Professor at Kings College London.

Elspeth Guild is a Jean-Monnet Professor of European migration law at the Radboud University Nijmegen (The Netherlands). She is also Senior Research Fellow at the Centre for European Policy Studies in Brussels and a partner at the London law firm Kingsley Napley.

Mark Gibney is the Carol Belk Distinguished Professor at the University of North Carolina-Asheville and an Affiliated Scholar at the Raoul Wallenberg Institute.