Publication | Open Access
The Challenges of Responding to Extrajudicial Executions: Interview with Philip Alston
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2010
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Procedural JusticeCriminal Justice ReformConstitutional LawLawCriminal LawInternational CrimesAdministrative LawSocial SciencesCriminal Justice ProcessUn Special RapporteurCriminal Justice SystemInternational Criminal LawPenologyCrime Against HumanityHuman RightsPunishmentProfessor AlstonInternational LawHuman Rights LawInternational Humanitarian LawExtrajudicial ExecutionsCriminal JusticePhilip AlstonInternational CriminologyAfrican Human RightsTransitional JusticeJusticePolitical ScienceSocial JusticeGlobal Justice
In our continuing series of reflections by human rights practitioners on their work, Philip Alston reflects here on his six-year term as UN Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions, completed in July 2010. In the interview, Professor Alston addresses some of the methodological challenges faced by UN Special Procedures in their work – and in particular, highlights the need for greater context-specific analysis in reporting. He also speaks about some of the key themes that feature prominently in many of his country visit reports – including impunity, corruption, witness protection, police accountability, targeted killings, and election-related violence and killings.
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