Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:335Hits:19953834Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID190974
Title ProperInternational organisations and terrorism
Other Title Informationmultilateral antiterrorism efforts, 1960–1990
LanguageENG
AuthorBlumenau, Bernhard ;  Müller, Johannes-Alexander
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article examines early antiterrorism negotiations within international organisations (IOs) and their outcomes. It assesses how international cooperation emerged in specialised, regional, and global IOs and provides a long-term overview from the 1960s until the late 1980s. Drawing on primary sources and scholarly literature, this article identifies the patterns, trends, and key characteristics of the successfully adopted measures. It demonstrates that early multilateral antiterrorism efforts faced several obstacles (sovereignty, national interests, mistrust, and geopolitics), and, therefore, international negotiations fared better when following a piecemeal approach within specialised or regional organisations, where the focus could be on specific aspects of terrorism (e.g., hostage-takings). A key characteristic of the successfully adopted antiterrorism instruments was the aut dedere aut iudicare principle, which allowed states to maintain perceptions of sovereignty by either extraditing or trying a suspect. The antiterrorism efforts examined here were mostly preventative in design and worked to discourage future terrorists by ensuring that safe havens were closed and that perpetrators faced justice. The shift to suicide terrorism in the 1990s would instead require new international antiterrorism efforts to focus on pre-emptive strategies, depriving terrorists of the means to carry out attacks. The roots of these measures were laid in the 1980s.
`In' analytical NoteTerrorism and Political Violence Vol.35, No.2; Jan-Jun 2023: p.433-451
Journal SourceTerrorism and Political Violence Vol: 35 No 1-4
Key WordsTerrorism ;  International Organisations ;  Antiterrorism ;  Multilateral Cooperation ;  United Nations


 
 
Media / Other Links  Full Text