Human Rights and the Dark Side of Globalisation: Transnational Law Enforcement and Migration Control

By: Thomas Gammeltoft-Hansen

LUP ID: 16a20a99-d774-467b-aeb2-1c0c59706c59

Publisher: Routledge

Page Reference: -

ISBN: 9781138222243

Keywords: extraterritorial obligations, global governance, human rights, international law, law and politics, transnational law enforcement

This edited volume examines the continued viability of international human rights law in the context of growing transnational law enforcement. With states increasingly making use of global governance modes, core exercises of public authority such as migration control, surveillance, detention and policing, are increasingly conducted extraterritorially, outsourced to foreign governments or delegated to non-state actors.

New forms of cooperation raise difficult questions about divided, shared and joint responsibility under international human rights law. At the same time, some governments engage in transnational law enforcement exactly to avoid such responsibilities, creatively seeking to navigate the complex, overlapping and sometimes unclear bodies of international law. As such, this volume argues that this area represents a particular dark side of globalisation, requiring both scholars and practitioners to revisit basic assumptions and legal strategies.

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