Skip to site navigation and search

Course | Columbia Law School

L6549 Terror and Consent

  • Share/email this course
  • Print

The world didn't change on September 11, 2001; it had already changed in 1990 and 9/11 and the ensuing wars against terror were the result. Thus the Wars against Terror are the successor conflict to the Long War of the twentieth century that ended in 1990, and they will drive further changes to the constitutional order beyond those that the end of the Long War brought about.

The Wars on Terror embrace the three distinct but related struggles: to prevent market state terrorism, protect against gross diminution of humane conditions, and preempt the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction. The outcome of these wars will determine whether the new, emerging constitutional order of the market state will be composed of states of consent or states of terror.

Change year

Section Offerings for 2012-13

Course No. Term Name
& Section Instructor(s) Schedule Location
L6549-001 12F Terror and Consent
P. Bobbitt TR 1:20 PM-2:40 PM GRHL 101

Choose a section for more information, including section descriptions, faculty, course limitations, syllabi, evaluations, points, writing credit eligibility, evaluation methods, textbooks, and learning outcome goals.

Getting current tweet...
Follow us on Twitter @ColumbiaLaw