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Counter-terrorism and the Detention of Suspected Terrorists - Preventive Detention and International Human Rights Law (Paperback)
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Counter-terrorism and the Detention of Suspected Terrorists - Preventive Detention and International Human Rights Law (Paperback)
Series: Routledge Research in Terrorism and the Law
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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In a regional, national and global response to terrorism, the
emphasis necessarily lies on preventing the next terrorist act.
Yet, with prevention comes prediction: the need to identify and
detain those considered likely to engage in a terrorist act in the
future. The detention of 'suspected terrorists' is intended,
therefore, to thwart a potential terrorist act recognising that
retrospective action is of no consequence given the severity of
terrorist crime. Although preventative steps against those
reasonably suspected to have an intention to commit a terrorist act
is sound counter-terrorism policy, a law allowing arbitrary arrest
and detention is not. A State must carefully enact anti-terrorism
laws to ensure that preventative detention does not wrongly accuse
and grossly slander an innocent person, nor allow a terrorist to
evade detection. This book examines whether the preventative
detention of suspected terrorists in State counter-terrorism policy
is consistent with the prohibitions on arbitrary arrest and
detention in international human rights law. This examination is
based on the 'principle of proportionality'; a principle underlying
the prohibition on arbitrary arrest as universally protected in the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and given effect to
internationally in the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights, and regionally in regional instruments including
the European Convention on Human Rights. The book is written from a
global counter-terrorism perspective, drawing particularly on
examples of preventative detention from the UK, US and Australia,
as well as jurisprudence from the ECHR.
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