INTERACTION BETWEEN THE RULE OF LAW AND NATIONAL SECURITY: COUNTERTERRORISM JURISPRUDENCE OF THE UNITED KINGDOM’S COURTS SINCE 9/11

Authors

  • Janakan Muthukumar Researcher, Queen Mary University of London Author

Keywords:

Rule of law, National Security

Abstract

Lord Justice Gross in Guardian News and Media v AB and CD recognises the rule of law as ‘a priceless asset of our country… a foundation of our constitution.’ In the same case, he recognises national security as ‘a national interest of first importance’ (Guardian News and Media v AB and CD, 2014). Although judges like Lord Hope in Secretary of State forthe Home Department v AF (No 3) acknowledges that the foremost responsibility of the democratic government is to protect individual liberty (Secretary of State for the Home Department v AF (No 3), 2009), such freedoms are often limited by caveats in the form of countervailing measures to respond to the threats to the national security. This pattern has been the post 9/11 context of terrorism. The 9/11 attack was the ‘watershed moment’, as Professor Fussey points out, that profoundly shifted the nature of UK counterterrorism policies (Fussey, 2011). The consequence of the tragedy, not only in the United States but also in other countries, including the UK, has given certain exemptions to state actors to develop appropriate counterterrorism policies. These policies allow the government to carry out executive measures to retribute individuals whom the government considers as potential threats to national security. Those executive measures include arbitrary arrest, asset freezing, control orders, and Terrorism Prevention and Investigation Measures (TPIMs). The enactments of antiterrorism statues further have legitimised those executive measures.

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References

Statutes and statutory instruments

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Published

07-06-2018

How to Cite

INTERACTION BETWEEN THE RULE OF LAW AND NATIONAL SECURITY: COUNTERTERRORISM JURISPRUDENCE OF THE UNITED KINGDOM’S COURTS SINCE 9/11. (2018). Commonwealth Law Review Journal, 4, 337-360. https://journal.thelawbrigade.com/clrj/article/view/345

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