This paper explores implications for Irish national security policy that arise from provisions contained within the Criminal Justice (Surveillance) Act (2009) empowering personnel of the Defence Forces to covertly appropriate intelligence admissible as evidence in the Irish courts. Drawing on security, criminological and socio-psychological theories, the paper claims a link between effective national security and transparent, accountable criminal justice frameworks. Increased reliance on the military to conduct surveillance is evaluated within this theoretical construct. The paper concludes that the 2009 surveillance legislation provides certain tactical benefits to the state in its attempts to disrupt the activities of transnational terror...
Surveillance is typically envisaged as the act of a person being physically watched, their movements...
The enactment of the Covert Human Intelligence Sources (Criminal Conduct) Act 2021 pre-empted the ou...
The exposure of two senior republicans as informers for British intelligence in 2005 led to a popula...
This paper explores implications for Irish national security policy that arise from provisions conta...
This paper explores implications for Irish national security policy that arise from provisions conta...
On the afternoon of September 11 2001 the Irish Prime Minister (Taoiseach), Bertie Ahern ordered the...
On the afternoon of September 11 2001 the Irish Prime Minister (Taoiseach), Bertie Ahern ordered the...
Security policy is an essential component of any state's governance. It consists of addressing prese...
Throughout the Cold War, Irish national security was detached from Western priorities and its policy...
In February 2012, the Supreme Court of Ireland invalidated a long-standing statutory provision that ...
Normally associated with routine troop deployments and logistic support to UN peace keeping and peac...
This chapter examines how judicial oversight can regulate secret state surveillance, with a particul...
While police and military typically are dealt with separately, even by separate specialists, in actu...
A notable feature of the surveillance case law of the European Court of Human Rights has been the te...
There is a widespread conviction that contemporary criminal justice developments can best be analyse...
Surveillance is typically envisaged as the act of a person being physically watched, their movements...
The enactment of the Covert Human Intelligence Sources (Criminal Conduct) Act 2021 pre-empted the ou...
The exposure of two senior republicans as informers for British intelligence in 2005 led to a popula...
This paper explores implications for Irish national security policy that arise from provisions conta...
This paper explores implications for Irish national security policy that arise from provisions conta...
On the afternoon of September 11 2001 the Irish Prime Minister (Taoiseach), Bertie Ahern ordered the...
On the afternoon of September 11 2001 the Irish Prime Minister (Taoiseach), Bertie Ahern ordered the...
Security policy is an essential component of any state's governance. It consists of addressing prese...
Throughout the Cold War, Irish national security was detached from Western priorities and its policy...
In February 2012, the Supreme Court of Ireland invalidated a long-standing statutory provision that ...
Normally associated with routine troop deployments and logistic support to UN peace keeping and peac...
This chapter examines how judicial oversight can regulate secret state surveillance, with a particul...
While police and military typically are dealt with separately, even by separate specialists, in actu...
A notable feature of the surveillance case law of the European Court of Human Rights has been the te...
There is a widespread conviction that contemporary criminal justice developments can best be analyse...
Surveillance is typically envisaged as the act of a person being physically watched, their movements...
The enactment of the Covert Human Intelligence Sources (Criminal Conduct) Act 2021 pre-empted the ou...
The exposure of two senior republicans as informers for British intelligence in 2005 led to a popula...