Preventing Terrorism and Controlling Risk :
Donkin, Susan.
Preventing Terrorism and Controlling Risk : A Comparative Analysis of Control Orders in the UK and Australia / by Susan Donkin. - xv, 89 páginas 3 ilustraciones recurso en línea. - SpringerBriefs in Criminology, 1 2192-8533 ; .
Springer eBooks
Introduction -- Legal Framework -- Criminological Insights -- From Crime Prevention to Crime Pre-emption -- Control Order Case Studies -- Discussion.
This Brief takes a provocative look at existing socio-legal literature with a comparative study of terrorism control orders, focusing on how the concept of pre-emption fits within a traditional criminological framework. This timely work examines how such measures might be conceived and interpreted within a situational crime prevention approach. Over the past decade, socio-legal scholars have identified a rise in pre-emptive control mechanisms to respond to terrorism and other threats in the post-9/11 world. Many have argued that this pre-emptive rationale has been used to justify the introduction of measures that transcend established legal and risk frameworks, to deal with individuals or groups thought to pose a threat to the state or its citizens. Preventing Terrorism and Controlling Risk: A Comparative Analysis of Control Orders in the UK and Australia will be of interest to researchers in Criminology and Criminal Justice, particularly with a focus on terrorism, risk assessment, and human rights.
9781461487050
10.1007/9781461487050 doi
HV6001-7220.5
Preventing Terrorism and Controlling Risk : A Comparative Analysis of Control Orders in the UK and Australia / by Susan Donkin. - xv, 89 páginas 3 ilustraciones recurso en línea. - SpringerBriefs in Criminology, 1 2192-8533 ; .
Springer eBooks
Introduction -- Legal Framework -- Criminological Insights -- From Crime Prevention to Crime Pre-emption -- Control Order Case Studies -- Discussion.
This Brief takes a provocative look at existing socio-legal literature with a comparative study of terrorism control orders, focusing on how the concept of pre-emption fits within a traditional criminological framework. This timely work examines how such measures might be conceived and interpreted within a situational crime prevention approach. Over the past decade, socio-legal scholars have identified a rise in pre-emptive control mechanisms to respond to terrorism and other threats in the post-9/11 world. Many have argued that this pre-emptive rationale has been used to justify the introduction of measures that transcend established legal and risk frameworks, to deal with individuals or groups thought to pose a threat to the state or its citizens. Preventing Terrorism and Controlling Risk: A Comparative Analysis of Control Orders in the UK and Australia will be of interest to researchers in Criminology and Criminal Justice, particularly with a focus on terrorism, risk assessment, and human rights.
9781461487050
10.1007/9781461487050 doi
HV6001-7220.5