This
anthology is designed to survey the use of counterterrorism laws and their
effects on civil liberties, particularly freedom of expression. The editors for
the volume will be Dr. Téwodros Workneh and Dr. Paul Haridakis of Kent State University. We are seeking chapter proposals for inclusion in a book proposal
we are submitting to Routledge.
The
terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 in the United States as well as other
terrorist-related incidents in different parts of the world have caused
profound changes in political, economic, and social relations globally. Nations
have aggressively sought a wide range of mechanisms to proactively curb
potential threats, such as strengthening controls on immigration, financial
transactions, and regulation of communication systems. While arms of executive
branches such as law enforcement bodies and even militaries are commonly part
of the anti-terrorism apparatus, the most conspicuous common denominator across
nations has been the rise of what came to be known as counter-terrorism laws.
Today, more than 45 countries in the world have enacted legislation that
specifically is designed to address terrorism concerns.
Counter-terrorism
laws usually empower states to expedite prosecution of alleged offenders by
bypassing standard criminal jurisprudence processes. Critics argue that
counter-terrorism laws are prone to be misappropriated by state actors who
routinely use such laws in non-terrorism domestic contexts. As a consequence,
laws designed to combat terrorism are being applied domestically in contexts
not involving terrorism—such as governmental efforts to quash political dissent
or restrict other forms of citizen expressive activities.
The recent
prominence of counter-terrorism laws across the world has had significant
implications to the study of global terrorism from social scientific
perspectives (e.g., legal and policy perspectives), especially in terms of
determining what constitutes (and doesn’t) an expression of terrorism. Evidence
from different parts of the world indicate many journalists, media
practitioners, activists and everyday citizens who disseminate alternative or
critical political discourse are experiencing various forms of harassment,
persecution, intimidation, and even legal prosecution under broadly framed
terrorism charges sanctioned by state-sponsored counter-terrorism legislation.
For example, in Ethiopia, the Anti-Terrorism Proclamation of 2009 has been used
to prosecute several bloggers and journalists who were accused of writing about
opposition groups designated by the government as terrorists. In the United
States, despite its strong tradition of First and Fourth Amendment
constitutional rights of free speech and privacy, the FBI has routinely used,
provisions of the USA Patriot Act of 2001 to demand information about U.S.
citizens including journalists’ sources. Saudi Arabia has aggressively used its
anti-terrorism law to criminalize a wide range of peaceful expression that has
subjected several individuals to different forms of retribution including
capital punishment.
Broadly
framed, this call for proposals is concerned with how global counter terrorism
laws have conditioned communication patterns, especially in terms of individual
and institutional political speech. Almost all counter-terrorism laws
incorporate language that affects communication, communication systems, media
and/or media practitioners, an individual expression. In many instances, these
laws define alleged terrorist speech, delineate the use of communication
systems to disseminate said speech, and designate parameters to prosecute
terrorists and networks of terrorism. At the same time, journalists, activists,
and everyday media users across the world continue to experience varying
degrees of state-sponsored harassment as a result of the broad interpretation
of counter-terrorism laws that conflate terrorist
expression with freedom of speech. In the midst of the rise of populist
politics, nationalist political movements, and the retreat of the democratic
order globally, the question about freedom of speech in the era of
counter-terrorism frameworks is urgent. It is against this backdrop that we
ask: What happens when a state-sanctioned legal framework aimed at protecting
the public from terrorist activity, mostly perpetrated from foreign
adversaries, is used internally against citizens? What are some of the
consequences of using counter-terrorism laws that are prone to conflate freedom
of expression with terrorist acts?
Manuscript
submissions may address the following themes through a case study approach.
Contributors shall focus on a given nation state and can explore one or a
combination of the following thematic areas in addition to other related themes
with the above scope in mind:
- Counter-terrorism laws and self-censorship
- The discourse/rhetoric of counter-terrorism laws
- Counter-terrorism laws and surveillance
- Country case studies of litigation focusing on counter terrorism laws
- Counter-terrorism laws and media practitioners
- Public communication in the age of counter-terrorism laws
- Counter-terrorism laws in democracies
- Counter-terrorism laws in autocracies
- Internet governance and counter-terrorism laws
- Counter-terrorism laws and privacy in digital platforms
- Journalism ethics and counter-terrorism laws
Deadlines
If you
would like to contribute, please submit an abstract of 250-300 words to Dr.
Téwodros Workneh at tworkneh@kent.edu or Dr. Paul Haridakis at pharidak@kent.edu by
January 15, 2019.
Submission
components
- Title of chapter
- Author name/s, institutional details
- Corresponding author’s email address
- Keywords (no more than 5)
- A short bio (Maximum 100 words)
Additional
guidelines
Commissioned
chapters will be around 7,000 words. Accepting an abstract does not guarantee
the publication of the final manuscript. Once the book proposal is approved,
all chapters will be subject to a double-blind reviewing process.
Timetable
Submission of
proposals January 15, 2019
Notification
of accepted proposals February 15, 2019
Submission
of final chapters May 30, 2019
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