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El. knyga: Security, Law and Borders: At the Limits of Liberties

(University of Kent, Belgium)
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This book focuses on security practices, civil liberties and the politics of borders in liberal democracies.

In the aftermath of 9/11, security practices and the denial of human rights and civil liberties are often portrayed as an exception to liberal rule, and seen as institutionally, legally and spatially distinct from the liberal state. Drawing upon detailed empirical studies from migration controls, such as the French waiting zone, Australian off-shore processing and US maritime interceptions, this study demonstrates that the limitation of liberties is not an anomaly of liberal rule, but embedded within the legal order of liberal democracies. The most ordinary, yet powerful way, of limiting liberties is the creation of legal identities, legal borders and legal spaces. It is the possibility of limiting liberties through liberal and democratic procedures that poses the key challenge to the protection of liberties.

The book develops three inter-related arguments. First, it questions the discourse of exception that portrays liberal and illiberal rule as distinct ways of governing and scrutinizes liberal techniques for limiting liberties. Second, it highlights the space of government and argues for a change in perspective from territorial to legal borders, especially legal borders of policing and legal borders of rights. Third, it emphasizes the role of ordinary law for illiberal practices and argues that the legal order itself privileges policing powers and prevents access to liberties.

This book will be of interest to students of critical security studies, social and political theory, political geography and legal studies, and IR in general.

Introduction 1(11)
The location of rights
2(3)
Liberal rule and liberties
5(3)
Chapter outline
8(4)
1 Limits of liberal rule
12(19)
Discourses on liberal rule
13(9)
Practices of liberal rule
22(9)
2 Borders of liberal rule
31(18)
Locating borders
32(3)
Borders of mobility
35(6)
Legal borders
41(8)
3 Liberties on the territory
49(20)
The law on the waiting zone
50(3)
Legal space of the waiting zone
53(2)
Legal rights in the waiting zone
55(4)
Policing, securitization and isolation
59(3)
Effective spaces of the waiting zone
62(2)
Legal borders on the territory
64(5)
4 Liberties on the seas
69(17)
From safety to security
70(1)
Policing and securitization
71(2)
Policing and borders
73(1)
Policing and law
73(3)
United States, the Caribbean and the high seas
76(2)
Europe, the Mediterranean and foreign seas
78(2)
The judiciary and the scope of rights
80(1)
Penalizing humanitarian action
81(5)
5 Liberties in third countries
86(18)
Australia's offshore places
87(1)
Law, space and excision
87(4)
Offshore locations
91(5)
Legal rights and legal exclusion
96(3)
Leased lands and Guantanamo
99(3)
Delegation
102(2)
6 Conclusions
104(7)
Notes 111(3)
Bibliography 114(26)
Index 140
Tugba Basaran is lecturer at the School of Politics and International Relations at the University of Kent. She holds a PhD in International Studies from the University of Cambridge.