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“Stand Your Ground” Laws And Justice: The Controversy Over Immunity To Criminal Prosecution, Talon R. Hurst
“Stand Your Ground” Laws And Justice: The Controversy Over Immunity To Criminal Prosecution, Talon R. Hurst
Talon R Hurst
“Stand Your Ground” laws have received a plethora of media attention in 2012, none of which have been in a positive light. These laws providing a person with immunity from criminal prosecution are now being scrutinized for their confusing nature. “Stand Your Ground” laws allow a person to stand his or her ground and meet force with force, including deadly force, when specific requirements are met. These laws intend for law-abiding citizens to protect themselves and others without fear of being criminally prosecuted. However, they often don not provide consistent guidelines to enforce and apply the immunity. Therefore, two persons …
Going Medieval: Targeted Killing, Self-Defense, And The Jus Ad Bellum Regime, Craig Martin
Going Medieval: Targeted Killing, Self-Defense, And The Jus Ad Bellum Regime, Craig Martin
Craig Martin
The U.S. targeted killing policy employs drone-launched missiles to kill suspected terrorists and insurgents in countries in which the U.S. is not clearly involved in an armed conflict. It has justified the program on two bases: that the U.S. is in an armed conflict with Al Qaeda and associated organizations; and that the U.S. can engage in the strikes as an exercise of self-defence. These strikes constitute a use of force against the states in which the targets are located, in jus ad bellum terms, and the claim to the right of self-defence is similarly reliance upon a jus ad …