Poetic injustice: a case study of the UK's anti-terrorism legislation
Banakar, R. 2008. Poetic injustice: a case study of the UK's anti-terrorism legislation. Retfærd: The Nordic Journal of Law and Justice. 31 (3/112), pp. 69-90.
Banakar, R. 2008. Poetic injustice: a case study of the UK's anti-terrorism legislation. Retfærd: The Nordic Journal of Law and Justice. 31 (3/112), pp. 69-90.
Title | Poetic injustice: a case study of the UK's anti-terrorism legislation |
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Authors | Banakar, R. |
Abstract | This paper explores the effects of anti-terrorism policy and legislation on the Muslim immigrant communities, in general, and the British-born Muslims, in particular. R v Malik, in which the Court of Appeal quashed Samina Malik's conviction on terrorist charges, provides our point of entry into the legal discourse on counter-terrorism. Malik's conviction at the Old Bailey and the subsequent decision of the Court of Appeal to declare her conviction unsafe, will serve to highlight three interrelated aspects of anti-terrorism policy and leglislation in the UK. These two decisions, firstly, will help to examine how the legal and policing measures to combat the threat of terrorism interact with the ethno-cultural relationships in contemporary Britain. Secondly, they will allow us to view the UK's anti-terrorism policy and legislation in relation to what David Garland termed the "culture of control", which marks the move from a criminal policy based on "penal welfarism" to a governance of crime based on "the management of risks". Finally, they will throw light on the tension between the UK government and the judiciary. |
Keywords | Anti-terrorism, security, Islamophobia, manageralism |
Journal | Retfærd: The Nordic Journal of Law and Justice |
Journal citation | 31 (3/112), pp. 69-90 |
ISSN | 0902-7351 |
Year | 2008 |
Publisher | Martinus Nijhoff |
Web address (URL) | http://ssrn.com/abstract=1323380 |
Publication dates | |
Published | 2008 |