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Extremism, Free Speech and Counter-Terrorism Law and Policy


ISBN13: 9781138545182
Published: March 2019
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £120.00



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This edited collection addresses a number of the free speech vs security concerns that are engaged by counter-terrorism law & policy across a number of liberal democracies. The book explores the delicate balance between free speech and the censoring of views that either promote hatred or clash with fundamental democratic values. It does this by looking at the perspectives and level of disagreement between those who consider today’s counter terrorism and extremism strategies to be a soft and liberal approach, and those who believe these strategies disproportionately impact freedom of expression, association and nonviolent political dissent.

The contributors include academics, practicing lawyers and think tank analysts who examine whether universities and schools incubators of violent radicalism and debate if the views of ‘extremist’ speakers and hate preachers need to be censored. Outside the UK, critical discussion of other liberal democracies’ regulation of counter-terrorism, extremism and free speech is also offered.

This book will of be great interest to researchers and practitioners with interests in extremism, terrorism, civil rights and freedom of speech.

Subjects:
Human Rights and Civil Liberties
Contents:
Introduction - Ian Cram
Countering terrorism through limits on inciteful speech: Principles and problems - Ian Cram
Legal v. Non-Legal Responses to Hateful Expression - Nadine Strossen
Counter Terrorism Policies and Freedom of Association – International and Comparative Perspectives - Ash Bhagwat
University free speech as a space of exception in Prevent? - Andrew Neal
Prevent in Schools after the Trojan Horse Affair - Helen Fenwick & Daniel Fenwick
Finding the Right Balance in Counter-Extremism: Debates and Policies in the UK and Europe - Emma Webb
Bad Law: How the United States Supreme Court Mishandled the Free Speech Issue in Holder v. Humanitarian Law Project - James Weinstein & Ash Bhagwat
Free speech and counter terrorism in Australia - Keiran Hardy & George Williams
Addressing terrorism in New Zealand’s low threat environment – Andrew Geddis & Elana Geddis