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  • ART : 28168 : Not available for external loan
    British torture, then and now : the role of the judges
    English
    20210100
    Wiley-Blackwell
    accountability for torture | prosecution for torture | legal counsel's role | malingering | destruction of evidence | complicity in torture | politics | Mohamed, Binyam | governmental entities | state compliance | rule of law | military courts | death in custody | Mousa, Baha | case studies | evidence admissibility | war on terror | impunity | complicity | military personnel | sensory deprivation | morality | legality | justifiability | physical violence | torture threshold | risk assessment | legal reasoning | decision making | process and outcome assessment | prisoner treatment | ill-treatment | detention | comparative study | armed forces | commission of inquiry | national courts | counterinsurgencies | judge's role | United Kingdom | Afghanistan | Northern Ireland [United Kingdom] | Iraq
    Modern law review ; vol. 84, no. 1
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