Introduction
Human Rights in an Age of International Cooperation
[T. Gammeltoft-Hansen & Jens Vedsted-Hansen]
Part I. General issues pertaining to human rights and transnational law enforcement
Shared responsibility for human rights violations: A relational account
[André Nollkaemper]
Extraterritoriality and human rights: Prospects and challenges
[Marko Milanovic]
Part II. Law enforcement and security operations
Transnational operations carried out from a State¿s own territory ¿ Armed drones and the extraterritorial effect of international human rights conventions
[Peter Vedel Kessing]
NSA surveillance and its meaning for international human rights law
[Mark Gibney]
Jurisdiction at sea: migrant interdiction and the transnational security state
[Douglas Guilfoyle]
Counter-piracy: Navigating the cloudy waters of international law, domestic law and human rights?
[Birgit Feldtmann]
Rescuing migrants at sea and the law of international responsibility
[Efthymios Papastavridis]
Part III. Migration control and access to asylum
Re-linking power and responsibility in extraterritorial immigration control. The case of immigration liaison officers
[Fabiane Baxewanos]
State responsibility and migration control: Australiäs international deterrence model
[Nikolas Feith Tan]
Multi-stakeholder operations of border control coordinated at the EU level and the allocation of international responsibilities
[Maïté Fernandez]
A `blind spot¿ in the framework of international responsibility? Third party responsibility for human rights violations: The case of Frontex
[Melanie Fink]
The legality of Frontex Operation Hera-type migration control practices in light of the Hirsi judgment
[Niels Frenzen]
The Dark Side of Globalization: do EU border controls contribute to death in the Mediterranean?
[Elspeth Guild ]
`Outsourcing¿ protection and the transnational relevance of protection elsewhere: the case of UNHCR
[Julian M. Lehmann]