
The Trouble with Terror: Liberty, Security and the Response to Terrorism
Cambridge University Press, 9/18/2008
EAN 9780521899482, ISBN10: 0521899486
Hardcover, 250 pages, 22.9 x 15.5 x 2 cm
Language: English
What is terrorism and can it ever be defended? Beginning with its definition, proceeding to its possible justifications, and culminating in proposals for contending with and combating it, this book offers a full theoretical analysis of the issue of terrorism. Tamar Meisels argues that, regardless of its professed cause, terrorism is diametrically opposed to the requirements of liberal morality and can only be defended at the expense of relinquishing the most basic of liberal commitments. Meisels opposes those who express sympathy and justification for Islamist (particularly Palestinian) terrorism and terrorism allegedly carried out on behalf of developing nations, but, at the same time, also opposes those who would tolerate any reduction in civil liberties in exchange for greater security. Calling wholeheartedly for a unanimous liberal front against terrorism, this is a strong and provocative attempt to address the tension between liberty and security in a time of terror.
Introduction
Part I. Defining and Defending Terrorism
1. Defining terrorism – a typology
2. The apologetics of terrorism
a refutation
Part II. Freedom, Security, and Rights in a Terrorist Age
Liberal-Democratic Dilemmas
3. How terrorism upsets liberty
4. Combatants – lawful and unlawful
Part III. Fighting Terrorism
5. Targeting terror
6. Torturing terrorists
7. Torture and the problem of dirty hands.