Pregled bibliografske jedinice broj: 1021930
Europe at a Crossroads - Countering Terrorism in the Surveillance Society
Europe at a Crossroads - Countering Terrorism in the Surveillance Society // Dealing with Terrorism - Empirical and Normative Challenges of Fighting the Islamic State / Engelhart, Marc ; Roksandić Vidlička, Sunčana (ur.).
Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, 2019. str. 3-17
CROSBI ID: 1021930 Za ispravke kontaktirajte CROSBI podršku putem web obrasca
Naslov
Europe at a Crossroads - Countering Terrorism in
the Surveillance Society
Autori
Derenčinović, Davor
Vrsta, podvrsta i kategorija rada
Poglavlja u knjigama, znanstveni
Knjiga
Dealing with Terrorism - Empirical and Normative Challenges of Fighting the Islamic State
Urednik/ci
Engelhart, Marc ; Roksandić Vidlička, Sunčana
Izdavač
Duncker & Humblot
Grad
Berlin
Godina
2019
Raspon stranica
3-17
ISBN
978-3-428-15799-0
Ključne riječi
terrorism, human rights, surveillance society
Sažetak
Recent terrorist attacks in Europe were used by the executive as a pretext for unprecedented restrictions of constitutional rights of citizens. Well established system of checks and balances was than radically redefined in favor of the executive branch. Abstention from constitutional protection took many faces. For instance, through administrative preventive detention persons under suspicion of terrorist activities have been deprived of their right to be imprisoned or taken to custody only upon decision by the impartial court. They were kept incommunicado and without right to hire a lawyer and to access to the court. Those who have been captured in the zones of active hostilities (in Afghanistan or Iraq) were considered as enemy combatants and therefore deprived of the rights that prisoners of war enjoy under the Geneva conventions of 1949 and Protocols thereto. Prohibition of torture and inhuman or degrading treatment that is considered as an absolute right under human rights conventions, was mitigated by the authorities through legal interpretations. For instance, to justify the practice of keeping imprisoned suspected terrorist sleepless for days, authorities denied criticism that it amounted to “sleep deprivation” but rather “modification of a sleep regime” that is not prohibited under international human rights law. Moreover, such extreme measures were justified on the grounds they were taken outside the boundaries of domestic jurisdiction and against foreigners who are not entitled to constitutional protection clauses. In addition to these measures taken against suspected terrorists who have been considered not only as perpetrators of criminal offence but as a genuine threat to national security, some of the counter-terrorist measures seriously affected ordinary citizens who had nothing to do with terrorism. These are the measures of mass surveillance and interception of telecommunications, email correspondence, social networks, measures of so called racial profiling etc.
Izvorni jezik
Engleski
Znanstvena područja
Pravo