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El. knyga: Critical Perspectives on Counter-terrorism

Edited by (Oxford Brookes University, UK), Edited by
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This volume examines the rationale, effectiveness and consequences of counter terrorism practices from a range of perspectives and cases.

The book critically interrogates contemporary counter-terrorism powers from military campaigns and repression through to the prosecution of terrorist suspects, counter-terrorism policing, counter-radicalisation programmes, and the proscription of terrorist organisations. Drawing on a range of timely and important case studies from around the world including the UK, Sri Lanka, Spain, Canada, Australia and the USA, its chapters explore the impacts of counter-terrorism on individuals, communities, and political processes.

The book focuses on three questions of vital importance to any assessment of counter-terrorism. First, what do counter-terrorism strategies seek to achieve? Second, what are the consequences of different counter-terrorism campaigns, and how are these measured? And, third, how and why do changes to counter-terrorism occur?

This volume will be of much interest to students of counter-terrorism, critical terrorism studies, criminology, security studies and IR in general.

Notes on contributors xi
Acknowledgements xvi
Introduction: the ends of counter-terrorism 1(10)
Lee Jarvis
Michael Lister
1 `There's a good reason they are called al-Qaeda in Iraq. They are al-Qaeda in Iraq.' The impossibility of a global counter-terrorism strategy, or the end of the nation state
11(30)
Bob De Graaff
2 Counter-terrorism: the ends of a secular ministry
41(15)
Charlotte Heath-Kelly
3 Spatial and temporal imaginaries in the securitisation of terrorism
56(21)
Kathryn Marie Fisher
4 Counter-terrorism as conflict transformation
77(14)
Laura Zahra Mcdonald
Basia Spalek
Phillip Daniel Silk
Raquel Da Silva
Zubeda Limbada
5 Contemporary Spanish anti-terrorist policies: ancient myths, new approaches
91(18)
Agata Serrano
6 `I read it in the FT': `everyday' knowledge of counter-terrorism and its articulation
109(21)
Lee Jarvis
Michael Lister
7 Prosecuting suspected terrorists: precursor crimes, intercept evidence and the priority of security
130(20)
Stuart Macdonald
8 Banishing the enemies of all mankind: the effectiveness of proscribing terrorist organisations in Australia, Canada, the UK and US
150(19)
Timothy Legrand
9 Britain's Prevent programme: an end in sight?
169(18)
Paul Thomas
10 How terrorism ends: negotiating the end of the IRA's `armed struggle'
187(23)
Paul Dixon
11 From counter-terrorism to soft authoritarianism: the case of Sri Lanka
210(21)
Neil Devotta
Index 231
Lee Jarvis is a Senior Lecturer in International Security at the University of East Anglia. He is author of Times of Terror: Discourse, Temporality and the War on Terror (2009), and co-author of Terrorism: A Critical Introduction (2011).

Michael Lister is Reader in Politics at Oxford Brookes University. He is co-author of Citizenship in Contemporary Europe (2008) and co-editor of The State: Theories and Issues (2005).