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The ever-present threat of terrorism and the growing human-rights backlash against anti-terrorist policies are becoming ever more significant on the international stage. Constant media-coverage and public concern have characterised the debate over the last ten years.
This book is a fair and objective assessment of counter-terrorist policy and human rights worldwide, and covers a wide breadth of international material. While raising key questions for reader consideration, this book aims for straight-forward consideration, leaving polemic to the reader.
Terrorism is one of the great threats to our globalised society, a phenomenon that threatens the security of us all. Constantly shifting its shape and emerging in unexpected new forms, it demands urgent, collective action to counter and contain it. But what is the price for such protection in terms of human rights and should we be prepared to pay it?
From the emergence of terrorist training camps to the controversy over Guantanamo Bay and the fierce debates surrounding new anti-terrorism laws, global responses to terrorism affect us all. In this book, David J. Whittaker explores the realities behind the attention-grabbing headlines by examining counter-terrorism principles, legislation and operational tactics. He does so with particular reference to Europe and the United States without neglecting Africa and South East Asia to provide a balanced and engaging introduction to the subject.
If terrorist activism is in some sense a raw message from those who are neither heard nor understand, then we have to move from the blanket generality of a War on Terror to an analysis of the specifics of terrorism and the coordination of an effective response. And we must be alive, the book concludes, to possible lines of terrorism in the future.
David J. Whittaker is a retired university lecturer and prolific author. His previous books include The Terrorism Reader (2001) and Terrorism: Understanding the Global Threat (2002).
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