Suspect Community: People's Experience of the Prevention of Terrorism Acts in Britain'This book sheds valuable light on the darker side of the operation of the act in Britain' Steven Greer, Fortnight'Written in an accessible style, this should be an invaluable reference tool for lawyers, students and human rights campaigners' Tribune'This book should be compulsory reading for anyone concerned with injustice in Britain' Catholic Herald'An important and long-overdue text ... that deserves to be read widely and should stand as a clarion call for all those interested in racism, the state and contemporary policing to incorporate the Irish far more centrally in their analyses'Paul Connolly, Capital & Class'The first systematic study of the operation of the PTA' Harry Potter, LCCJ Newsletter'The critique is precise and the arguments are clear and irrefutable, a guarantee that this book will not be read by those whose votes ensure the Act's continued retention' Books Ireland'This book deserves fulsome praise for challenging the academic silence surrounding this area and for reminding us that it is possible to conduct rigourous, scholarly and interventionist work without becoming dependent or involved with the managerial gatekeepers of the criminal justice system' Journal of Law and Society |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 18
Page 93
... criminal justice in Britain : one for people drawn into the criminal justice process under the PTA and another for those being dealt with under the ordinary criminal law . The focus in this chapter has been on describing the arrest and ...
... criminal justice in Britain : one for people drawn into the criminal justice process under the PTA and another for those being dealt with under the ordinary criminal law . The focus in this chapter has been on describing the arrest and ...
Page 149
... ordinary criminal law . One key difference is the length of time a person can be detained - four days under the ordinary criminal law and seven days under the PTA . But apart from the differences in law , there are other significant ...
... ordinary criminal law . One key difference is the length of time a person can be detained - four days under the ordinary criminal law and seven days under the PTA . But apart from the differences in law , there are other significant ...
Page 263
... Law called for a jurisprudence of violence.15 By this he meant that it was time to shift the focus of legal thinking ... ordinary criminal law and the emergency legislation . On some occasions emergency powers become incorporated into ...
... Law called for a jurisprudence of violence.15 By this he meant that it was time to shift the focus of legal thinking ... ordinary criminal law and the emergency legislation . On some occasions emergency powers become incorporated into ...
Contents
The Study in Context | 1 |
Policing Ports and Airports Examination | 13 |
Examinations and Detentions at Ports | 34 |
Copyright | |
14 other sections not shown
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Common terms and phrases
48 hours anti-Irish racism arrest and detention asked Belfast Britain cell Chapter charged civil liberties Codes of Practice Colville Report Court detention regime door England evidence examining officers exclusion order fingerprints friends going held Home Office Home Office Circular Home Secretary Human Rights impact intelligence interrogation interview Irish community Jellicoe Report landing card legislation living London night Northern Ireland offence operation ordinary criminal law ordinary decent criminals organisations Paddington Green paragraph people's experiences period person plastic bullets police officers police station political violence port powers ports and airports Prevention of Terrorism prison procedures questions reasonable released Section seven days Shackleton Report solicitor someone Special Branch stopped and examined Stranraer Strip Searching suspicion taken talk tell Terrorism Act Terrorism Temporary Provisions terrorist thing toilet told took travelling United Kingdom wanted woman women