Countering Terrorism in Britain and France: Institutions, Norms and the Shadow of the Past

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Authors Dr Frank Foley
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Year 2015
Pages 352
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Additional information
General
Authors Dr Frank Foley
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Year 2015
Others
Identification
ISBN-13 9781107484153
Format
Pages 352
Description

Though Britain and France have faced a similar threat from Islamist terrorism in the years following September 11 2001, they have often responded in different ways to the challenges it posed. This groundbreaking work offers the first in-depth comparative analysis of counterterrorist policies and operations in these two leading liberal democracies. Challenging the widely held view that the nature of a state's counterterrorist policies depends on the threat it is facing, Foley suggests that such an argument fails to explain why France has mounted more invasive police and intelligence operations against Islamist terrorism than Britain and created a more draconian anti-terrorist legal regime. Drawing on institutional and constructivist theories, he develops a novel theoretical framework that puts counterterrorism in its organisational, institutional and broader societal context. With particular appeal to students and specialists of International Relations and Security Studies, this book will engage readers in the central debates surrounding anti-terrorist policy.