edited by Evan J.
Criddle
Public emergencies such as
civil wars, natural disasters, and economic crises test the theoretical and
practical commitments of international human rights law. During national
crises, international law permits states to suspend many human rights
protections in order to safeguard national security. States frequently overstep
the limits of this authority, violating even peremptory human rights such as
the prohibitions against torture and prolonged arbitrary detention. In this
volume, leading scholars from law, philosophy and political science grapple
with challenging questions concerning the character, scope, and salience of
international human rights, and they explain how the law seeks to protect human
rights during emergencies. The contributors also evaluate the law's successes
and failures and offer new proposals for strengthening respect for human
rights.