Ch 2: Law, Security and the State of Perpetual Emergency
Ch 3: Drone Warfare and the Emergence of Exceptional Space
Ch 4: 'Lawfare' and Counterterrorism under Democratic and Authoritarian Regimes
Ch 5: Lowing the bar: the fragility of the 'rehabilitative ideal' in the penal responses to terrorism crimes
Ch 6: Unintended Consequences of Swedish Asylum Procedures: National Security Implications of Refugees Stuck in Legal Limbo
Ch 7: 'Extremely loud and incredibly close': Criminal Terrorism and Exceptional Legislation in Italy
Ch 8: Anti-terrorism as Neo-Colonialism
Ch 9: Institutionalizing Irregularities: Terrorism prosecutions in the specialized 'court' of Saudi Arabia
Ch 10: The heavy cost of a state of emergency on policing
Ch 11: Sovereign and Belligerent Powers
Ch 12: Conclusion
Linda Bishai teaches international law and the use of force as an Adjunct Professor at the George Washington University, USA. In addition to research on international law issues, she has focused on countering violent extremism and security sector reform.
Presenting diverse contributors from legal, academic, and practitioner sectors, this book illustrates how the distinctions between international and domestic law are falling away in the context of security, particularly in the responses to terrorism, and explores the implications of these dramatic shifts in the normative order. Fundamental changes in the powers of the state and the rights of populations have accelerated since the globalized response to 9/11, creating effects that spread beyond borders and operate in a new, as yet under-conceptualized space. Although these altered practices were said to be in response to exceptional circumstances — a response to terrorism — they have become increasingly established in an altered baseline norm. This book explores the (inter)national implications of exceptional legal efforts to protect states’ domestic space in the realm of security.
Linda Bishai teaches international law and the use of force as an Adjunct Professor at the George Washington University, USA. In addition to research on international law issues, she has focused on countering violent extremism and security sector reform.