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The Law of the List
UN Counterterrorism Sanctions and the Politics of Global Security Law

Governing though the technology of the list is transforming international law, global security and the power of international organisations.

Gavin Sullivan (Author)

9781108491921, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 23 April 2020

394 pages, 9 b/w illus.
23.4 x 15.7 x 2.3 cm, 0.68 kg

'… the work underlines how, and to which extent, law and legal considerations help shape and structure international politics and global diplomacy - and that should reflexively feed into further theorizing by lawyers and social scientists alike.' Dr. Morag Goodwin, International Organizations Law Review

The spread of violent extremism, 9/11, the rise of ISIL and movement of 'foreign terrorist fighters' are dramatically expanding the powers of the UN Security Council to govern risky cross-border flows and threats by non-state actors. New security measures and data infrastructures are being built that threaten to erode human rights and transform the world order in far-reaching ways. The Law of the List is an interdisciplinary study of global security law in motion. It follows the ISIL and Al-Qaida sanctions list, created by the UN Security Council to counter global terrorism, to different sites around the world mapping its effects as an assemblage. Drawing on interviews with Council officials, diplomats, security experts, judges, secret diplomatic cables and the author's experiences as a lawyer representing listed people, The Law of the List shows how governing through the list is reconfiguring global security, international law and the powers of international organisations.

1. The law of the list
2. Global listing technologies and the politics of expertise
3. The list as multiple object: the UN Office of the Ombudsperson
4. Complexity in the courts: the spatiotemporal dynamics of the list
5. Conclusions.

Subject Areas: International organisations & institutions [LBBU], Public international law [LBB], United Nations & UN agencies [JPSN1], International relations [JPS]

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