[Download] "Extradition's Paradox: Duty, Discretion, And Rights in the World of Non-Inquiry." by Stanford Journal of International Law ~ eBook PDF Kindle ePub Free
eBook details
- Title: Extradition's Paradox: Duty, Discretion, And Rights in the World of Non-Inquiry.
- Author : Stanford Journal of International Law
- Release Date : January 22, 2007
- Genre: Law,Books,Professional & Technical,
- Pages : * pages
- Size : 315 KB
Description
INTRODUCTION As international law grows increasingly preoccupied with the status of individuals, (1) international extradition, once considered exclusively within the realm of foreign policy and state-to-state relations, now finds itself saturated with concerns of human rights. Throughout its history, international extradition law--an intricate doctrinal web spun by treaties, statutes, the workings of national politics, and concerns of transnational comity (2)--has resisted the incursion of individual rights concerns, dismissing them as inconvenient to the pursuit of broader policy goals. As extradition remains a creature of treaties, (3) their negotiators and architects have little incentive to sacrifice state power and discretion for the protection of rights of would-be fugitives.