The ticking bomb scenario: challenging the relationship between the rule of law and emergency

Taranto, Beatrice (A.A. 2023/2024) The ticking bomb scenario: challenging the relationship between the rule of law and emergency. Tesi di Laurea in Comparative public law, Luiss Guido Carli, relatore Elena Griglio, pp. 97. [Master's Degree Thesis]

Full text for this thesis not available from the repository.

Abstract/Index

Foundations, methodology, sources and limits of research. Emergency clauses in contemporary constitutionalism. The ticking bomb scenario: challenging the borders of emergency clauses. The us war on terror: a challenge to the separation of powers and protection of fundamental rights. The war on terror as a challenge to the protection of constitutional rights. The fight against terrorism as an exception to the separation of powers: towards the strengthening of the executive? Rule of law versus security in emergency situations: a comparison between national experiences outside the us. The Israeli constitutional experience: a long-standing relationship with security threats. The Spanish approach to states of emergencies and alarm. The constitutional limits to states of exception in the German basic law. The fight against domestic terrorism in the Italian experience. Moral, ethical, and legal aspects in the age of terror. The priority of morality. Ethics of the lesser evil. A window on legal considerations. Security and rights: from theory to practice. Navigating the approaches to the ticking bomb scenario. Looking forward: the balance of rights.

References

Bibliografia: pp. 88-97.

Thesis Type: Master's Degree Thesis
Institution: Luiss Guido Carli
Degree Program: Master's Degree Programs > Master's Degree Program in International Relations (LM-52)
Chair: Comparative public law
Thesis Supervisor: Griglio, Elena
Thesis Co-Supervisor: Orsini, Alessandro
Academic Year: 2023/2024
Session: Extraordinary
Deposited by: Alessandro Perfetti
Date Deposited: 09 Jul 2025 12:49
Last Modified: 09 Jul 2025 12:49
URI: https://tesi.luiss.it/id/eprint/42835

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year

Repository Staff Only

View Item View Item