How to Combat Transnational Repression

Issue Date July 2026
Volume 37
Issue 3
Page Numbers 82-98
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In October 2025, two men were sentenced for an Iranian-directed murder-for-hire plot against the exiled activist Masih Alinejad. Such accountability, the authors argue, remains the exception. As Iran and a growing roster of authoritarian states reach across borders to harass, abduct, and kill exiles and diaspora critics, justice is routinely thwarted by diplomatic immunity, the territorial limits of jurisdiction, and host governments’ competing geopolitical interests—as the killing of Jamal Khashoggi illustrates. The authors map these accountability gaps and propose ways to close them: clarifying the extraterritorial reach of human-rights obligations, strengthening UN review mechanisms, and grounding responses in a consistent, country-agnostic approach that prioritizes victims’ safety over a perpetrator’s strategic weight. If these gaps persist, they warn, democracies will normalize authoritarian repression on their own soil and erode the rule of law.

About the Authors

Siena Anstis

Siena Anstis is a doctoral fellow at the Norwegian Center for Human Rights, University of Oslo, and a senior legal advisor and researcher at the Citizen Lab in the University of Toronto’s Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy.

View all work by Siena Anstis

Marcus Michaelsen

Marcus Michaelsen is a senior researcher at the Citizen Lab.

View all work by Marcus Michaelsen

Image Credit: Florian Wiegand/picture alliance via Getty Images