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Surveillance, counter-terrorism and comparative constitutionalism

Title
Surveillance, counter-terrorism and comparative constitutionalism / edited by Fergal Davis, Nicola McGarrity and George Williams.
ISBN
9780415829106 (hardback)
0415829100 (hardback)
9780203517451 (ebk)
Publication
Abingdon, Oxon : Routledge, 2014.
Physical Description
xiv, 340 pages ; 24 cm.
Summary
"The decade after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks saw the enactment of anti-terrorism laws around the world that challenged understandings and assumptions about public institutions, human rights and constitutional law. Many of those laws remain on the statute books and continue to have a profound impact on constitutionalism and the rule of law. One of the most striking and rapid areas of development has been the conferral of increased powers of surveillance on law enforcement and intelligence agencies. The chapters in this edited book examine the impact of these powers on constitutionalism at both the domestic and international levels. The book discusses the prevalence of mechanisms of mass surveillance; the challenges that technological developments pose for constitutionalism; new actors in the surveillance state; the use of surveillance material as evidence in court and the difficulties of balancing secrecy and fair trial requirements; and the effectiveness of constitutional and other forms of review of surveillance powers. The contributors to the book who are leading international experts in anti-terrorism and constitutional law take a comparative approach looking at jurisdictions including the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Europe, Israel, India, Japan, China and Australia. The book draws important conclusions about the constitutional implications, short- and long-term, domestic and international, of the expansion of surveillance powers after 9/11"-- Provided by publisher.
Format
Books
Language
English
Added to Catalog
February 04, 2014
Series
Routledge research in terrorism and the law.
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents
Mapping the terrain / Fergal Davis, Nicola McGarrity and George Williams
A judicial perspective : surveillance evidence and the right to a fair trial / Anthony Whealy QC
Championing local surveillance in counter-terrorism / Clive Walker
Surveillance regimes in contemporary India / Ujjwal Singh
Privatised counter-terrorist surveillance : constitutionalism undermined / Fiona de Londras
How secure is our privay in seceurope? : European security through surveillance / Moica de Boer and Flora Goudappel
Preserving privacy in a digital age : lesson of comparative constitutionalism / David Cole
On the end of freedom in public spaces : legal challenges of wide-area and multiple sensor surveillance systems / Jens Kremer
GPS surveillance and human rights review : the European Court of Human Rights and the United States Supreme Court in comparative perspective / Federico Fabbrini and Mathias Vermeulen
The impact of human rights law on measure of mass surveillance in the United Kingdom / Merris Amos
Transatlantic perspectives on counter-terrorism surveillance : surveillance, borders and the culture of legality / Cian Murphy
From the west to the east : migration of surveillance policy
Warrantless wiretrapping in the United States / Owen Fiss
From convert to coercive : a new model of surveillance by intelligence agencies / Nicola McGarrity and George Williams
The use or intelligence in counter-terrorism prosecutions and the role of the prosecutor / David Scharia
State Surveillance in an age of security / Conor Gearty
Politicized challenges, de-politicised responses: political monitoring in China's transitions / Hualing Fu
Internet surveillance and popular constitutionalism / Vanessa MacDonnell .
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