More Secure, Less Free?
1 hr read
Rate this book:
About This Book
"Mark Sidel takes us behind the headlines to reveal how key provisions of controversial antiterror policies have been buried in state legislation, and how the military has taken over key police functions. Sidel discusses the continuing debates on antiterror law in the crucial states of New York, California, and Michigan, and explains how the military - through an informant program known as "Eagle Eyes" - is now taking a direct hand in domestic antiterror efforts. The effect has been a quiet but pervasive chilling of our most basic civil liberties." "Sidel also investigates aspects of American antiterror policy largely ignored in other books, including its effects on the American academic world and the nonprofit sector. And he provides the first international comparisons of antiterror policy yet published in an American volume, contrasting security initiatives in Great Britain, Australia, and India with the American experience."--BOOK JACKET.
Buy This Book
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate, BookOrb earns from qualifying purchases.
Write a Review
Sign in to write a review.
More by Mark Sidel
Central-Local Relations in Asi
Central-Local Relations in Asian Constitutional Systems
Diasporas and development
Law and society in Vietnam
Law in the Democratic Republic
Law in the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (1945-1976) and early Socialist Republic of Vietnam (1976-1986) (The Harvard research guides to the legal systems of East & Southeast Asia)
Old Hanoi
Philanthropy and law in South
Philanthropy and law in South Asia