The Justice and Security Act of 2013 provides for closed hearings in civil cases involving security sensitive information. The author argues that the UK Government successfully created and reinforced the authority of secretive sources to ensure the Bill was passed. Such authoritative sources promoted imaginaries of a future attack but also the need to respect legal principles that protected members of ‘our’ community. The dynamics between these imaginaries and principles led to the passing of the Bill in its final form – approving closed procedures in court, but removing inquests and issues of the ‘public interest’ from the Bill. Moreover, deliberation of the Bill was represented as negotiated and rational, thereby providing the final Act w...
The Investigatory Powers Tribunal recently found that government surveillance was unlawful, marking ...
This monograph offers a uniquely comprehensive and in-depth legal account of official secrets in the...
The significance of Edward Snowden’s revelations has been viewed primarily through the prism of thre...
This paper outlines the ways in which the United Kingdom manages civil litigation concerning sensiti...
Virtually every nation has had to confront tensions between the rule-of-law demands for transparency...
The concept of secrecy as a mechanism for not providing government information, on the one hand, and...
The book proposes an important collection of scholarly essays dealing with the broad area of secrecy...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Cambridge University Pre...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from SAGE Publications via th...
Closed material proceedings operating under the Justice and Security Act 2013 (UK) exclude non-Gover...
Closed material proceedings operating under the Justice and Security Act 2013 (UK) exclude non-Gover...
The law cannot be a secret hidden from the public. This proposition strikes most of us as uncontrove...
The lecture was delivered on Wednesday 16 March 2011The concept of secrecy as a mechanism for not pr...
This article foregrounds four key powers through which the UK intelligence and police agencies (broa...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 46-56.Chapter One. The nature of secrecy -- Chapter Two. The ...
The Investigatory Powers Tribunal recently found that government surveillance was unlawful, marking ...
This monograph offers a uniquely comprehensive and in-depth legal account of official secrets in the...
The significance of Edward Snowden’s revelations has been viewed primarily through the prism of thre...
This paper outlines the ways in which the United Kingdom manages civil litigation concerning sensiti...
Virtually every nation has had to confront tensions between the rule-of-law demands for transparency...
The concept of secrecy as a mechanism for not providing government information, on the one hand, and...
The book proposes an important collection of scholarly essays dealing with the broad area of secrecy...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Cambridge University Pre...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from SAGE Publications via th...
Closed material proceedings operating under the Justice and Security Act 2013 (UK) exclude non-Gover...
Closed material proceedings operating under the Justice and Security Act 2013 (UK) exclude non-Gover...
The law cannot be a secret hidden from the public. This proposition strikes most of us as uncontrove...
The lecture was delivered on Wednesday 16 March 2011The concept of secrecy as a mechanism for not pr...
This article foregrounds four key powers through which the UK intelligence and police agencies (broa...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 46-56.Chapter One. The nature of secrecy -- Chapter Two. The ...
The Investigatory Powers Tribunal recently found that government surveillance was unlawful, marking ...
This monograph offers a uniquely comprehensive and in-depth legal account of official secrets in the...
The significance of Edward Snowden’s revelations has been viewed primarily through the prism of thre...