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The purpose of this book is to honour the influential and wide-ranging work of Professor Clive Walker. It explores Professor Walker’s influence from three perspectives. Firstly, it provides a historical reflection upon the development of the law and policy in relation to counter-terrorism and miscarriages of justice since the 1970s. This historical perspective, which is often overlooked, is particularly timely 17 years after 9/11 as trends become clearer and historical perspective even more valuable. So too with miscarriages of justice: while there was considerable public and political scrutiny following high-profile miscarriages such as the Birmingham Six, Guildford Four, and others, in the early 1990s, today there is much less scrutiny, despite significant concern relating to issues such as legal aid and access to justice increasing the potential (if not likelihood) for miscarriages to occur. By including a critical historical perspective, this book enables us to learn lessons from the past and to minimise contemporary risks of miscarriages of justice. Secondly, this book provides a critical analysis of the law and policy as it stands today, and its future trajectory. Applying Walker’s theoretical and analytical contributions to the field, the authors focus on pressing contemporary concerns, identifying lacunae where relevant, as well as the possible, probable and preferable future trends. Finally, the book celebrates and recognises the significant contributions by Walker, with each chapter built around one or more of Walker’s key works.
Genevieve Lennon is Senior Lecturer in Law at the University of Strathclyde.Colin King is Reader in Law at the University of Sussex.Carole McCartney is a Professor in the School of Law at Northumbria University.
1. Introduction Genevieve Lennon, Colin King and Carole McCartneyPART ICOUNTER-TERRORISM2. The Constitutional Governance of Counter-Terrorism Brice Dickson3. Beyond the Ordinary: Criminal Law and Terrorism Dermot Walsh4. Terrorism and Counter-Terrorism in the UK: From Northern Irish Troubles to Global Islamist Jihad Steven Greer5. Strategies for Countering Terrorism: An Australian Perspective Keiran Hardy and George Williams6. Shades of Independent ReviewDavid Anderson7. The Use of Special Advocates in Countering Terrorism: Human Rights, Best Practice and Procedural Tradition John Jackson8. Lawyers, Military Commissions and the Rule of Law in Democratic States Fionnuala Ní Aoláin9. Excluding Terrorists Jessie Blackbourn10. Speaking of Terrorism and Terrorist Speech: Defining the Limits of Terrorist Speech Offences Anneke Petzsche and Manuel Cancio Meliá11. All-Risks Counter-Terrorist Policing Genevieve LennonPART IIMISCARRIAGES OF JUSTICE12. Defining Miscarriages of Justice in the Context of Post-9/11 Counter-Terrorism Kent Roach13. The Doctrine of Public Interest Immunity and Fair Trial Guarantees Simon McKay14. T e Forensic Science Paradox Carole McCartney15. Post-Conviction Review in England and Wales: Perpetuating and Rectifying Miscarriages of Justice Stephanie Roberts16. Justice Denied? Compensation for Miscarriages of Justice Hannah Quirk and Colin King17. Revisiting Miscarriages of Justice: Innocence Projects, Review Commissions and Expert Evidence Kathryn M CampbellPART IIIA RETROSPECTIVE18. Living with Counter-Terrorism Laws and their Discontents Clive Walker
Lennon, King and McCartney have composed a brilliant symphony for an extraordinary (ongoing) career which offers a trove of rigorous expert legal analysis neatly set in sociopolitical and historical context. Imbued with healthy doses of realism and humility, the volume is an apt tribute to a towering figure on the academic counterterrorism scene which he has done so much to build.