Intersentia has published Massimo Fichera and Jens Kremer (eds.), Law and
Security in Europe: Reconsidering the Security Constitution:
This collection of essays is divided in two parts. In the first part, security is considered from
a theoretical angle, as a phenomenon that has become an integral part of modern
society and inevitably interacts with law in many ways. The aim of the authors’
analyses is to emphasise the ambiguity of the notion of security and its
tendency to expand and affect simultaneously different fields of law.
Depending on the adopted approach, security can be
understood in many different terms and through various concepts: inter alia through exceptionality, from
a constructivist viewpoint, or as human security. Whereas for example, an
‘existential’ approach takes risk and danger as a fact of life and is based on
the assumption of the fragility of the human condition, leading to traditional
and military understandings of security, a constructivist approach regards
security as a discursive speech act enabling criticism of security claims.
Analysing security in connection with law highlights both tensions and
contradictions. From
classical analyses on states of emergency to new conceptualizations of security
as a specific dimension within the process of European integration (‘the
European Security Constitution’), legal approaches to security and law today
are facing many paradoxes and challenges.
The second part of the book considers some of these
security dilemmas in two specific areas of law: human rights and criminal law. Here, the authors address the
militarisation of the fight against terrorism, the distinction between
administrative and penal sanctions, the limits of intelligence activities and
the scope of criminalisation.
As the book brings together scholars from different
fields of law focusing on law on security from particular perspectives it is
appealing to those constitutional, criminal, international and EU lawyers who
are interested in both theoretical and practical aspects of the relationship
between security and law.
Other forthcoming titles include:
- EU Sanctions: Law and Policy Issues Concerning Restrictive Measures - Iain Cameron (ed.)
- Actus Reus and Participation in European Criminal Law - Johannes Keiler
- European Federal Criminal Law The Federal Dimension of EU Criminal Law - Carlos Gómez-Jara Díez
- Inside Police Custody: An Empirical Account of Suspects' Rights in Four Jurisdictions - Taru Spronken, Ed Cape and Jacqueline Hodgson (eds.)
- Feminist Perspectives on Transitional Justice From International and Criminal to Alternative Forms of Justice - Estelle Zinsstag, Martha Albertson Fineman (eds.)
- Historical Memory and Criminal Justice in Spain A Case of Late Transitional Justice - Josep M. Tamarit Sumalla
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