What Limits for Government Control? Civil Liberties and Anti‐terror Measures after the Heathrow Bomb Plot |
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Authors: | RODERICK PARKES |
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Affiliation: | Researcher at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs (SWP), Berlin |
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Abstract: | The threat posed by transnational terrorism has excited debate about how best to calibrate relations between government, the courts and parliament: how can the provision of internal security be facilitated, whilst respecting freedoms and ensuring that policies enjoy broad legitimacy? Attention has focussed primarily on the power of the courts. Sections of the government have mooted a curtailment of judicial competencies; by contrast, a broad range of actors calls for ‐ at the least ‐ the maintenance of current judicial powers as the best means to prevent government from exploiting its already large scope for manoeuvre, as well as to overcome public scepticism. Yet the current debate misses the point that relations between government, courts and parliament have already been altered. Government has gained extra political resources thanks to its participation in forms of international counterterrorist cooperation. This shift of power, and associated problems, were clear during the recent ‘Heathrow bomb plot’. |
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Keywords: | transnational terrorism human rights executive power European cooperation |
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