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In the years since 9/11 counter-terrorism law and policy has proliferated across the world. This handbook provides an authoritative and critical analysis of how laws are, and ought to be, invoked in domestic jurisdictions against terrorism. The original contributions to the book are written by experts in the field of terrorism law and policy, allowing for discussion of a wide range of regulatory responses and strategies of governance. The chapters engage with areas of traditional interest to lawyers such as policing, criminal offences, the courts, and prison regimes but also tackle emerging…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
In the years since 9/11 counter-terrorism law and policy has proliferated across the world. This handbook provides an authoritative and critical analysis of how laws are, and ought to be, invoked in domestic jurisdictions against terrorism. The original contributions to the book are written by experts in the field of terrorism law and policy, allowing for discussion of a wide range of regulatory responses and strategies of governance. The chapters engage with areas of traditional interest to lawyers such as policing, criminal offences, the courts, and prison regimes but also tackle emerging subjects including preventing radicalisation and protective/preparative security.
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Autorenporträt
Genevieve Lennon is Chancellor's Fellow at the School of Law, University of Strathclyde. Her research expertise lies in the areas of counter-terrorism law and policy, in particular in relation to human rights, accountability, and counter-terrorist policing. She has published and presented on various aspects of counter-terrorism. Clive Walker is Professor Emeritus of Criminal Justice Studies at the School of Law, University of Leeds. He was Director of the Centre for Criminal Justice Studies from 1987 to 2000 and then Head of the Law School between 2000 and 2005 and in 2010. He has written extensively on terrorism issues, with many published papers not only in the UK but also in several other jurisdictions, especially Australia and the US, where he has been a visiting professor at George Washington, Melbourne, New South Wales, and Stanford Universities.