Responsibility and the Modern Private Military Company
Hin-Yan Liu
When faced with those who act with impunity, we seek
the protection of law. We rely upon the legal system for justice, from
international human rights law that establishes common standards of protection,
to international criminal law that spearheads efforts to end impunity for the
most heinous atrocities. While legal processes are perceived to combat impunity,
and despite the ready availability of the law, accountability often remains
elusive. What if the law itself enables impunity?
Law's Impunity asks this question in the context of
the modern Private Military Company (PMC), examining the relationship between
law and the concepts of responsibility and impunity. This book proposes that
ordinary legal processes do not neutralise, but rather legalise impunity. This
radical idea is applied to the abysmal record of human rights violations
perpetrated by the modern PMC and the shocking absence of accountability. This
book demonstrates how the law organises, rather than overcomes, impunity by
detailing how the modern PMC exploits ordinary legal processes to
systematically exclude itself from legal responsibility. Thus, Law's Impunity
offers an alternative to conventional thinking about the law, providing an
innovative approach to assess and refine the rigour of legal processes in the
ongoing quest to end impunity.