Vol. 1 No. 1 (2024)

View Issue TOC

Targeted Killing, Drone Warfare, and International Law in African Counter-Terrorism: Institutional Capacity and Political Will

Abraham Kuol Nyuon, Associate Professor of Politics, Peace, and Security
DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19544864
Published: January 2, 2024

Abstract

This article examines Targeted Killing, Drone Warfare, and International Law in African Counter-Terrorism: Institutional Capacity and Political Will with a focused emphasis on Tanzania within the field of Political Science. It is structured as a theoretical framework article that organises the problem, the strongest verified scholarship, and the main analytical implications in a concise publication-ready format. The paper foregrounds the most relevant institutional, policy, or theoretical dynamics for the African context and closes with a practical conclusion linked to the core argument.

Full Text:

Read the Full Article

The HTML galley is loaded below for inline reading and better discovery.

How to Cite

Abraham Kuol Nyuon (2024). Targeted Killing, Drone Warfare, and International Law in African Counter-Terrorism: Institutional Capacity and Political Will. African Conflict Resolution Journal (Political Science focus), Vol. 1 No. 1 (2024). https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19544864

Keywords

Targeted Killing DroneKilling Drone WarfareAfrican Counter-Terrorism InstitutionalCounter-Terrorism Institutional CapacityTargeted KillingKilling Drone

Research Snapshot

Desktop reading view
Language
EN
Formats
HTML + PDF
Publication Track
Vol. 1 No. 1 (2024)
Current Journal
African Conflict Resolution Journal (Political Science focus)

References