ABSTRACT

This book examines how legal, political, and rights discourses, security policies and practices migrate and translate across the North Atlantic.

The complex relationship between liberty and security has been fundamentally recast and contested in liberal democracies since the start of the 'global war on terror'. In addition to recognizing new agencies, political pressures, and new sensitivities to difference, it is important that not to over-state the novelty of the post-9/11 era: the war on terror simply made possible the intensification, expansion, or strengthening of policies already in existence, or simply enabled the shutting down of debate. Working from a common theoretical frame, if different disciplines, these chapters present policy-oriented analyses of the actual practices of security, policing, and law in the European Union and Canada. They focus on questions of risk and exception, state sovereignty and governance, liberty and rights, law and transparency, policing and security. In particular, the essays are concerned with charting how policies, practices, and ideas migrate between Canada, the EU and its member states.

By taking ‘field’ approach to the study of security practices, the volume is not constrained by national case study or the solipsistic debates within subfields and bridges legal, political, and sociological analysis. It will be of much interest to students of critical security studies, sociology, law, global governance and IR in general.

Mark B. Salter is Associate Professor at the School of Political Studies, University of Ottawa.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|17 pages

Special delivery

The multilateral politics of extraordinary rendition

chapter 3|19 pages

Risk-focused security policies and human rights

The impossible symbiosis

chapter 5|25 pages

Tracing terrorists

The European Union–Canada Agreement on Passenger Name Record (PNR) matters

chapter 6|12 pages

The global governance of data privacy regulation

European leadership and the ratcheting up of Canadian rules

chapter 7|18 pages

Made in the USA?

The impact of transatlantic networks on the European Union's data protection regime

chapter 9|21 pages

The accountability gap

Human rights and EU external cooperation on criminal justice, counter-terrorism, and the rule of law

chapter 10|36 pages

The role of NGOs in the access to public information

Extraordinary renditions and the absence of transparency

chapter 11|14 pages

Replacing and displacing the law

The Europeanization of judicial power

chapter 13|23 pages

A coordinated judicial response to counter-terrorism?

Counter-examples

chapter 14|7 pages

The other transatlantic

Policies, practices, fields