National Security, Civil Liberties, & Political Dissent in the United States Background to the Current Crisis

Type
Publication
Authors
Sidel ( M )
 
Category
 
Publication Year
2004 
Publisher
University of Michigan Press, United States 
URL
[ private ] 
Pages
31p 
Subject
National security, Political dissent, Civil liberties, US 
Abstract
This book is about the rippling and sometimes chilling effects of antiterrorism and national security policy and law on a range of aspects of American life since the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. The early outlines of this story are by now reasonably well known and have been discussed in detail by David Cole and James X. Dempsey, Nat Hentoff, Nancy Chang, Raneta Lawson Mack and Michael J. Kelly, and others—the early, quick passage of the USA Patriot Act and its in›uence in American life; the detention of citizens and noncitizens on suspicion or charges of terrorist activity; increasing government secrecy and regulation on such varied issues as bioterrorism, cybersecurity, and a host of other topics; and the growing resistance from civil libertarians, legislators, citizens, and many others.1 This chapter surveys some of the key developments in that ‹rst stage of antiterrorism policy after September 11. It is but a brief summary of a wide and complex range of government measures and responses since September 11, intended to provide an overview for the general reader rather than in-depth scholarly analysis.  
Description
31 p.; 28 cm 
Number of Copies

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