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Chehtman, Alejandro --- "Terrorism and the conceptual divide between international and transnational criminal law" [2017] ELECD 1497; in Van der Wilt, Harmen; Paulussen, Christophe (eds), "Legal Responses to Transnational and International Crimes" (Edward Elgar Publishing, 2017) 107

Book Title: Legal Responses to Transnational and International Crimes

Editor(s): Van der Wilt, Harmen; Paulussen, Christophe

Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing

ISBN (hard cover): 9781786433985

Section: Chapter 6

Section Title: Terrorism and the conceptual divide between international and transnational criminal law

Author(s): Chehtman, Alejandro

Number of pages: 21

Abstract/Description:

Whether terrorism should be conceptualised as a transnational or international crime is a deeply contested issue in contemporary international law. What is more interesting, the terms of the debate are made significantly more difficult by the fact that the adequate distinction between these categories is itself a matter of controversy. This chapter provides an answer to this question by precisely clarifying the conceptual and normative faultlines between domestic, transnational and international criminal law. Accordingly, it first provides a conceptual analysis of these categories and suggests that the key distinction between them is jurisdictional, i.e. it concerns the scope of states’ right to punish them. On this basis, it examines where terrorism fits in these categories and why. Unsurprisingly, the chapter argues that terrorist acts do not fit in one category only. The chapter distinguishes four ‘varieties’ of terrorism which are conceptualised along two axes, i.e., national and cross-border terrorism, and state terrorism and terrorism conducted by non-state groups. Ultimately, it concludes that while the majority of terrorist acts conducted by non-state groups belong to the province of transnational criminal law, the majority of those perpetrated by state authorities should be conceptualised as core crimes of international criminal law. But what is more important, the chapter proposes a substantive criterion to explain why any such act should belong in one category or the other.


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