Genest Memorial Lecture, Osgoode Hall, January 7

osgoodI am delighted to be going to Osgoode Hall Law School in Toronto next month to deliver the Genest Memorial Lecture and a number of seminars, as well as to meet and work with some graduate researchers there and colleagues on the Faculty. My Genest Lecture, the poster for which is attached, will take place at 12:30 on January 7th and is entitled ‘Counter-Terrorism, Transnationalism, and Human Rights’. The abstract is below and the poster for the lecture is attached here.

Much of contemporary terrorism uses the products of globalisation in recruitment, financing and other operations. The transnationalism of terrorism, together with the cross-border connectedness of people, capital, communication infrastructure and politics, have combined so that states now act in concert on a wide variety of issues, one of which is counter-terrorism. In this lecture, Professor de Londras outlines institutional, multi- and bi-lateral forms of transnational counter-terrorism, arguing that ‘external actors’ are deeply involved in directing counter-terrorism. This has serious implications for constitutonalism and human rights, raising questions as to accountability, autonomy, legitimacy and the effective protection of human rights.

New Book: Critical Debates on Counter-Terrorism Judicial Review

9781107053618I am delighted that my new book, co-edited with Fergal F. Davis (UNSW), has now been published by Cambridge University Press. The book, entitled Critical Debates on Counter-Terrorism Judicial Review, features an excellent collection of international scholars who bring their own unique perspectives to the debates about the role and nature of judicial review of counter-terrorist measures, as well as alternatives to judicial oversight (such as enhanced political oversight, enquiries and independent reviewers). This is reflected in the table of contents:

Introduction

Counter-terrorist judicial review: beyond dichotomies, Fergal F. Davis and Fiona de Londras

Part I. Judging Counter-Terrorist Judicial Review
1. Counter-terrorist judicial review as regulatory constitutionalism, Fiona de Londras
2. Counter-terrorism judicial review by a traditionally weak judiciary, Jens Elo Rytter
3. When good cases go bad: unintended consequences of rights-friendly judgments, David Jenkins
4. The rhetoric and reality of judicial review of counter-terrorism actions: the United States experience, Jules Lobel
Part II. Beyond Counter-Terrorist Judicial Review
5. Emergency law as administrative law, Mark Tushnet
6. The politics of counter-terrorism judicial review: creating effective parliamentary scrutiny, Fergal F. Davis
7. Independent reviewers as alternative: an empirical study from Australia and the UK, Jessie Blackbourn
8. Public inquiries as an attempt to fill accountability gaps left by judicial and legislative review, Kent Roach
Part III. Counter-Terrorist Judicial Review in the Political Constitution
9. Rebalancing the unbalanced constitution: juridification and national security in the United Kingdom, Roger Masterman
10. Running business as usual: deference in counter-terrorist rights review, Cora Chan
10. Deference and dialogue in the real-world counter-terror context, Gavin Phillipson
Part IV. Internationalised Counter-Terrorist Judicial Review
11. Counter-terrorism law and judicial review: the challenge for the Court of Justice of the European Union, Cian C. Murphy
12. Post 9/11 UK counter-terrorism cases in the European Court of Human Rights: a ‘dialogic’ approach to rights’ protection or appeasement of national authorities?, Helen Fenwick
13. Accountability for counter-terrorism: challenges and potential in the role of the courts, Helen Duffy.

The book emerged from a workshop generously funded by the British Academy/Leverhulme Trust small grants scheme, and can now be ordered directly from CUP. You can also read the substantive introductory chapter written by myself and Fergal for free through my SSRN page, and my chapter on the Durham repository.

Latest Publication: “Counter-Terrorist Detention and International Human Rights Law”

57938800I am delighted to see that Ben Saul (ed), Research Handbook on Terrorism and International Law (Edward Elgar) has now been published. This impressive collection covers the widest imaginable range of topics within its broad scope, and includes a chapter by me on counter-terrorist detention and human rights law. A pre-print of the chapter is available on SSRN, and the abstract is below.

In this chapter I consider the compatibility of counter-terrorist detention with international human rights law from the starting point that what is protected in international law is not a right to be free from detention per se but rather a right to be free from the arbitrary deprivation of one’s liberty. This is clearly rooted in international human rights law, which is the main focus of this chapter (acknowledging that it interacts with international humanitarian law in situations of armed conflict).

The chapter demonstrates that counter-terrorist detention can be compatible with the standards of international human rights law as they have been interpreted and applied in the past decade, but that in the process of such interpretation and application those standards have at times been diluted to a worrying extent.

Accounting for Rights in EU Counter-Terrorism: Recording

In June I gave a seminar at the Oxford Human Rights Hub entitled ‘Accounting for Human Rights in EU Counter-Terrorism’. The abstract is reproduced below (original), and a recording of the seminar is available on the OxHRH website here.

While a baseline of security is required in order to enjoy rights per se, ‘countering terrorism’ often infringes on the rights of suspected terrorists and, more broadly, undermines social cohesion and the rule of law. For that reason, it is important that we pay proper attention to rights in the making, implementation and review of counter-terrorism laws and policies.

In spite of this, the pre-legislative process in EUCT is problematic from a rights-based perspective, even where the formal ex ante impact assessment process is employed. This process, undertaken by the Commission, engages with stakeholders to predict the environmental, economic and social impacts of proposed measures and provide an evidence-base for political decision-making.

Social impacts include impacts on rights. Understandably, however, the qualitative analysis of rights impact is not easily assessed alongside the quantitative analysis of economic impact, with more ‘concrete’ data often appearing to receive more analytical weight. Thus, it is not unusual when reading these assessments to notice that the analysis of rights is ‘light touch’.

This might be expected given that forward-looking analyses are speculative, especially in relation to values that are difficult to quantify. But it points towards a need to afford more weight to rights in these assessments, especially as they can also shape later analyses of the ‘effectiveness’ of measures where such ex post assessment takes place.

We can only ascertain a measure’s actual impact once it is operational. Even at that point it is important to remember that the impact of EUCT will not be uniform across every member state or social group: the vast majority of implementation is national and there can be significant variations across the member states.

In spite of this, formal ex post facto review of EU counter-terrorism is remarkably infrequent, even where the measure in question expressly requires it. Of the 88 legally binding minding measures introduced since 2001, 68 required review, only 33 of which have so far taken place on time (10 have not reached their time limit).

The lack of effective and regular ex post facto review of EUCT is highly problematic from a rights-based perspective. The necessity and proportionality of any measure may vary according to changing security and social circumstances and thus requires regular review. Without this, we must rely on the hope that a court will have the opportunity to judicially review a measure to assess its legality, which assessment is only part of a comprehensive rights-related understanding of the impact of counter-terrorist measures.

The EU is a relative newcomer to counter-terrorism, and although it takes some account of rights, this is not sufficient to ensure EUCT is as rights-compliant as possible. The EU does have the potential to account more fully for rights in its counter-terrorism, in particular by enhancing participation in the life cycle of counter-terrorist law- and policy-making and instigating regular, participatory and evaluative review.