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National security, surveillance and terror: Canada and Australia in comparative perspective

book
posted on 2016-11-01, 00:00 authored by R Lippert, K Walby, Ian WarrenIan Warren, Darren Palmer
This edited collection brings together leading scholars to comparatively investigate national security, surveillance and terror in the early 21st century in two major western jurisdictions, Canada and Australia. Observing that much debate about these topics is dominated by US and UK perspectives, the volume provides penetrating analysis of national security and surveillance practices in two under-studied countries that reveals critical insights into current trends. Written by a wide range of experts in their respective fields, this book addresses a fascinating array of timely questions about the relationship among national security, privacy and terror in the two countries and beyond. Chapters include critical assessments of topics such as: National Security Intelligence Collection since 9/11, The Border as Checkpoint in an Age of Hemispheric Security and Surveillance, Unmanned Aerial Vehicles and Law Enforcement, as well as Federal Government Departments and Security Regimes. An engaging and empirically driven study, this collection will be of great interest to scholars of security and surveillance studies, policing, and comparative criminology.

History

Series

Crime prevention and security management

Pagination

1 - 344

Publisher

Palgrave Macmillan

Place of publication

Basingstoke, Eng.

ISBN-13

9783319432427

Language

eng

Publication classification

X Not reportable; A7 Edited book

Copyright notice

2016, The Editors & Authors

Editor/Contributor(s)

R Lippert, K Walby, I Warren, D Palmer

Number of chapters

11

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