Available Formats
Detention of Terrorism Suspects: Political Discourse and Fragmented Practices
By (Author) Dr Maureen Duffy
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
8th February 2018
8th February 2018
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Comparative law
345.02317
Hardback
320
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
617g
Controversial erosions of individual liberties in the name of anti-terrorism are ongoing in liberal democracies. The focus of this book is on the manner in which strategic discourse has been used to create accepted political narratives. It specifically links aspects of that discourse to problematic and evolving terrorism detention practices that happen outside of traditional criminal and wartime paradigms, with examples including the detentions at Guantanamo Bay and security certificates in Canada. This book suggests that biased political discourse has, in some respects, continued to fuel public misconceptions about terrorism, which have then led to problematic legal enactments, supported by those misconceptions. It introduces this idea by presenting current examples, such as some of the language used by US President Donald Trump regarding terrorism, and it argues that such language has supported questionable legal responses to terrorism. It then critiques political arguments that began after 9/11, many of which are still foundational as terrorism detention practices evolve. The focus is on language emanating from the US, and the book links this language to specific examples of changed detention practices from the US, Canada, and the UK. Terrorism is undoubtedly a real threat, but that does not mean that all perceptions of how to respond to terrorism are valid. As international terrorism continues to grow and to change, this book offers valuable insights into problems that have arisen from specific responses, with the objective of avoiding those problems going forward.
Duffy successfully crafts a comprehensive account of the problematic post-9/11 political discourse on detention This book is an attractive volume for both theorists and practical observers of current detention practices. -- Kasey McCall-Smith, University of Edinburgh * Edinburgh Law Review *
By deconstructing the arguments that were made in the aftermath of 9/11, Professor Duffy provides us with a deeper and richer understanding of laws response to the challenges that terrorism presented Professor Duffys work should be useful not just in helping us understand the laws failures and successes with respect to terrorism, it should also help us more generally to understand the pressures that the rule of law necessarily faces in situations of crisis. -- Barry Sullivan, Loyola University Chicago School of Law * Canadian Criminal Law Review *
Maureen Duffy is Assistant Professor of Law at the University of Calgary.