About us
Our Work
Our Websites
Our Venues
Blog
Contact us
Tribute to Lokman Slim
About us
HISTORY
WHO WE ARE
DONORS AND PARTNERS
IN THE MEDIA
Our Work
INITIATIVES
EVENTS
PUBLICATIONS
Our Websites
UMAM Biblio
Memory At Work
MENA Prison Forum
Tadmor
Lokman Slim Foundation
Our Venues
The Hangar
UMAM by the Sea
Blog
Contact Us
Tribute to Lokman Slim
HISTORY
|
WHO WE ARE
|
DONORS AND PARTNERS
|
IN THE MEDIA
INITIATIVES
|
EVENTS
|
PUBLICATIONS
UMAM Biblio
|
Memory At Work
|
MENA Prison Forum
|
Tadmor
|
Lokman Slim Foundation
The Hangar
|
UMAM by the Sea
SHARE
Back to Print
Print
Martial Justice for All?
Lebanon's Military Court: A "State of Martial Law" Within a "State of Law"
كلنا برسم القضاء العسكري؟
القضاء العسكري بين «هيبة الدولة» و«دولة القانون»
© 2014 UMAM D&R
English - Arabic
Download the English version
Download the Arabic version
About
In October 2014, UMAM D&R and Hayya Bina produced a booklet to introduce their latest project and provide a brief overview of the debates that have surrounded Lebanon's Military Court (MC) for most of its existence. As noted in the publication, in 1968, Lebanese parliament acknowledged that the promulgation of the Martial Punishment Law in 1946 was in need of a new legal text and constitutional reworking. In 1997, a United Nations body noted the role the military justice system was playing in matters that seemed beyond its mandate.
Clearly, the contemporary debates surrounding topics of military justice, civilian affairs, and state security are hardly new. Thus, there is a need for a reinvigorated discussion of Lebanon's Military Court that is stooped in historical analysis.
This publication was part of the
Martial Justice for All? Lebanon's Military Court: A "State of Martial Law" Within a "State of Law"
initiative and was made possible thanks to funding from the European Union.
In October 2014, UMAM D&R and Hayya Bina produced a booklet to introduce their latest project and provide a brief overview of the debates that have surrounded Lebanon's Military Court (MC) for most of its existence. As noted in the publication, in 1968, Lebanese parliament acknowledged that the promulgation of the Martial Punishment Law in 1946 was in need of a new legal text and constitutional reworking. In 1997, a United Nations body noted the role the military justice system was playing in matters that seemed beyond its mandate.
Clearly, the contemporary debates surrounding topics of military justice, civilian affairs, and state security are hardly new. Thus, there is a need for a reinvigorated discussion of Lebanon's Military Court that is stooped in historical analysis.
This publication was part of the
Martial Justice for All? Lebanon's Military Court: A "State of Martial Law" Within a "State of Law"
initiative and was made possible thanks to funding from the European Union.
SHARE