ABSTRACT
This collection of previously published work on security and rights focuses on the appropriate relationship between rights and what we can think of as counterterrorism policy. Such a focus might seem both necessary, because of 9/11, and unfortunate, because there are other causes of insecurity besides terrorism. However, the intensity of the 'war on terror' has created an ongoing surge of scholarship on the relationship between security and human rights that either has indirect implications for debates about security where terrorism is not in issue, or has directly led to an attempt to rethink more generally the idea of security and its relationship to rights.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|71 pages
The Image of Balance
part II|358 pages
Institutional Models
part |88 pages
The Emergency Constitution
part |65 pages
Weak Constitutionalism
part |202 pages
Strong Constitutionalism
part III|33 pages
Civilizing Security?