ABSTRACT

Terror attacks on western civilian targets have stimulated interest in the dilemmas faced by liberal societies when combating threats to national security. Combining the perspectives of political science and law, this book addresses that discourse, asking how democracies seek to harmonize the protection of individual liberties with the defence of state interests.

The book focuses on the experience of Israel, a country whose commitment to democratic values has continuously been challenged by multiple threats to national survival. It examines the legal, legislative and institutional methods employed to resolve the dilemmas generated by that situation, and thus provides a unique interpretation of Israeli national security behaviour. Policy-making and policy-implementation in this sphere, it shows, have reflected not just external constraints but also shifts in the domestic balance of power between the executive, the legislature and the judiciary. The book concludes with an agenda of the measures that each branch of government needs to implement in order to repair the flaws that have developed in this system over time.

Based on a close reading of legislative and court readings, the book proposes a new taxonomy for the analysis of national security legal frameworks, both in Israel and elsewhere in the democratic world. As such it will be of great interest to students and scholars of political science, national security law, Israeli history and civil-military relations.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

part |40 pages

Foundations

chapter |19 pages

Frameworks of analysis

chapter |19 pages

Cultural contexts

part |126 pages

Development

chapter |27 pages

Centralization, 1948–1963

chapter |28 pages

Diffusion, 1963–1977

chapter |37 pages

Realignment, 1977–1995

chapter |32 pages

Legalization, 1995–2008

part |67 pages

Perspectives and prescriptions

chapter |31 pages

Diagnosis

Israel's hybrid national security legal framework

chapter |34 pages

Prognosis

Modes of reform