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E-grāmata: National Security Secrecy: Comparative Effects on Democracy and the Rule of Law

  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Sērija : ASCL Studies in Comparative Law
  • Izdošanas datums: 13-Jul-2017
  • Izdevniecība: Cambridge University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781108325943
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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Sērija : ASCL Studies in Comparative Law
  • Izdošanas datums: 13-Jul-2017
  • Izdevniecība: Cambridge University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781108325943
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Excessive government secrecy in the name of counterterrorism has had a corrosive effect on democracy and the rule of law. In the United States, when controversial national security programs were run by the Bush and Obama administrations - including in areas of targeted killings, torture, extraordinary rendition, and surveillance - excessive secrecy often prevented discovery of those actions. Both administrations insisted they acted legally, but often refused to explain how they interpreted the governing law to justify their actions. They also fought to keep Congress from exercising oversight, to keep courts from questioning the legality of these programs, and to keep the public in the dark. Similar patterns have arisen in other democracies around the world. In National Security Secrecy, Sudha Setty takes a critical and comparative look at these problems and demonstrates how government transparency, privacy, and accountability should provide the basis for reform.

Excessive national security secrecy has been a vexing problem in both of the post-9/11 US administrations, undermining democracy and the rule of law. Using a comparative and critical analysis, Sudha Setty considers constitutional priorities and potential avenues for reform in National Security Secrecy.

Recenzijas

'An illuminating discussion of the costs of secrecy and how Congress and the Courts have condoned such an anti-democratic state of affairs. Its attention to how European courts and institutions have more vigourously challenged governmental claims of secrecy is exceptional.' Kent Roach, Professor of Law and Chair in Law and Public Policy, University of Toronto 'With insightful analysis, Sudha Setty demonstrates how the misuse of secrecy by governments in the United States and other countries has done serious damage to individual rights, democratic values, and the rule of law. We need to restore legislative and judicial checks on misleading executive assertions.' Louis Fisher, Scholar in Residence, The Constitution Project 'Sudha Setty writes with remarkable dexterity about the exponential increase in the powers of the state to remain secret while enhancing national security regimes in the war against terror. Setty gives a comprehensive account of how national security secrecy is enabled legally and politically in contemporary democracies at the expense of structural accountability, rule of law and fundamental rights.' Ujjwal Kumar Singh, University of Delhi

Papildus informācija

This book considers how excessive national security secrecy undercuts democracy and the rule of law, necessitating comparative and critical analysis toward potential reforms.
Acknowledgments x
Introduction 1(16)
PART I THE INFRASTRUCTURE OF SECRECY IN THE UNITED STATES
17(56)
1 Executive Branch Secrecy
19(18)
2 Congressional Complicity
37(16)
3 An Overly Deferential Judiciary
53(20)
PART II COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES ON TRANSPARENCY
73(46)
4 International and Supranational Norms
75(12)
5 The United Kingdom
87(17)
6 India
104(15)
PART III SOCIETAL TOLERANCE FOR NATIONAL SECURITY SECRECY
119(31)
7 Public Fear and Resilience
121(13)
8 Individual Privacy and Secrecy: A Matter of Contract or a Human Right?
134(16)
Conclusion 150(4)
Notes 154(75)
Index 229
Sudha Setty teaches national security law and comparative constitutional law at Western New England University School of Law, where she has twice won teaching awards. She was a Fulbright Senior Specialist at the Chinese University of Hong Kong Faculty of Law, and has edited Constitutions, Security, and the Rule of Law (2014). Setty has also served as chair of the Comparative Law and National Security Law sections of the Association of American Law Schools.