A quest for defining terrorism in international law: The emerging consensus
The United Nations (UN) has no internationally-agreed definition of terrorism.The definitional impasse has prevented the adoption of a Comprehensive Convention on International Terrorism.Even in the immediate aftermath of 9/11 the UN failed to adopt the Convention, and the deadlock continues to this...
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my.uum.repo.138102015-04-13T06:21:06Z http://repo.uum.edu.my/13810/ A quest for defining terrorism in international law: The emerging consensus Mahmood, Mohammed Salman Masum, Ahmad JX International law The United Nations (UN) has no internationally-agreed definition of terrorism.The definitional impasse has prevented the adoption of a Comprehensive Convention on International Terrorism.Even in the immediate aftermath of 9/11 the UN failed to adopt the Convention, and the deadlock continues to this day. The prime reason is the standoff with the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC).The Arab Terrorism Convention and the Terrorism Convention of the Organization of the Islamic Conference defines terrorism to exclude armed struggle for liberation and self-determination.This increased its complexity and vagueness.The aim of this paper is to examine the definitional aspect of terrorism and the challenges faced in adopting a single universally accepted definition by the international community.The methodology adopted in this paper is purely a library based research focusing mainly on primary and secondary sources. The paper concludes that nations or states have to come to agreement on a definition of the term “terrorism”, for without a consensus of what constitute terrorism, nations or states could not unite against it.A general definition of terrorism is necessary in order for the international community to fight against terrorism in a precise way. Penerbit Universiti Utara Malaysia 2014 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://repo.uum.edu.my/13810/1/5jis2014.pdf Mahmood, Mohammed Salman and Masum, Ahmad (2014) A quest for defining terrorism in international law: The emerging consensus. Journal of International Studies, 10. pp. 77-93. ISSN 1823-691X http://jis.uum.edu.my/ |
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The United Nations (UN) has no internationally-agreed definition of terrorism.The definitional impasse has prevented the adoption of a Comprehensive Convention on International Terrorism.Even in the immediate aftermath of 9/11 the UN failed to adopt the Convention, and the deadlock continues to this day. The prime reason is the standoff with the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC).The Arab Terrorism Convention and the Terrorism Convention of the Organization of the Islamic Conference defines
terrorism to exclude armed struggle for liberation and self-determination.This increased its complexity and vagueness.The aim of this paper is to examine the definitional aspect of terrorism and the challenges faced in adopting a single universally accepted definition by the international community.The methodology adopted in this paper is purely a library based research focusing mainly on primary and secondary sources. The paper concludes that nations or states have to come to agreement on a definition of the term “terrorism”, for without a consensus of what constitute terrorism, nations or states could not unite against it.A general definition of terrorism is necessary in order for the international community to fight against terrorism in a precise way. |
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Article |
author |
Mahmood, Mohammed Salman Masum, Ahmad |
author_facet |
Mahmood, Mohammed Salman Masum, Ahmad |
author_sort |
Mahmood, Mohammed Salman |
title |
A quest for defining terrorism in international law: The emerging consensus |
title_short |
A quest for defining terrorism in international law: The emerging consensus |
title_full |
A quest for defining terrorism in international law: The emerging consensus |
title_fullStr |
A quest for defining terrorism in international law: The emerging consensus |
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A quest for defining terrorism in international law: The emerging consensus |
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quest for defining terrorism in international law: the emerging consensus |
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Penerbit Universiti Utara Malaysia |
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2014 |
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http://repo.uum.edu.my/13810/1/5jis2014.pdf http://repo.uum.edu.my/13810/ http://jis.uum.edu.my/ |
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