'The Practice and Problems of Transnational Counter-Terrorism provides the most detailed map yet of the complex post-9/11 architecture of global security law. De Londras shows how seemingly disparate counterterrorism projects at different sites and scales are interconnected in practice into a powerful new form of international legal ordering and highlights the profound political and normative stakes that arise as a result. This book will be indispensable reading for lawyers, counterterrorism scholars, policy-practitioners and others concerned with the dynamics of international and transnational lawmaking, the erosion of human rights and the expansion of unaccountable security powers.' Gavin Sullivan, Edinburgh Law School, The University of Edinburgh
Introduction; 1. The institutions of transnational counter-terrorism; 2. The law of transnational counter-terrorism; 3. Ever-expanding transnational counter-terrorism; 4. Transnational counter-terrorism in the domestic sphere; 5. Accountability; Conclusion.