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Lost Liberties

by Cynthia Brown

This collection of 13 original essays offers an analysis of the Bush/Ashcroft programme to curtail civil liberties and constitutional rights in the name of security. Respected lawyers and scholars subject the legislation, policy shifts and executive orders to serious critical scrutiny.

FORMAT
Paperback
LANGUAGE
English
CONDITION
Brand New


Publisher Description

In the wake of September 11, John Ashcroft's Justice Department has presided over an unprecedented assault on the civil liberties established in the Bill of Rights. Enacted in haste and, at times, in partial secrecy, the legislation and orders have not been carefully examined, and their implications are only now beginning to surface. Not since the internment of Japanese Americans during the 1940s have we witnessed such abridgment of American rights.While the loss of liberties has been met with apathy by the press and public alike, the lawyers and analysts in Lost Liberties provide a detailed, comprehensive look at the USA Patriot Act, chronicling the destructive impact of crackdowns on thousands of Americans and revisiting the ugly history of political repression in times of crisis. Featuring original contributions from David Cole, Michael Tomasky, Nancy Chang, Kenneth Roth, and Anthony Romero, Lost Liberties will be a critical text for those who want to know in advance the long-term implications of these drastic measures.

Author Biography

Cynthia Brown, former program director of Human Rights Watch, is now a freelance consultant and editor based in New York.

Table of Contents

The Patriot act; secret detentions for suspected terrorists; racial profiling; surveillance; human rights violations in the "war on terrorism"; (part contents).

Review

To those who scare peace-loving people with phantoms of lost liberty, my message is this: Your tactics only aid terrorists.

Kirkus US Review

Just in time for the second anniversary of 9/11, a compendium of lawyerly essays on the cost of that event to our civil rights. Former Human Rights Watch program director Brown here assembles a dozen attorneys and legal scholars to consider what some consider to be the rise of a near-police state from the ashes of the World Trade Center. "Within hours after the collapse [of the Twin Towers] and the destruction of a portion of the Pentagon," she writes, "most of us knew that civil liberties would be under fire." And not for the first time: as several contributors note, after similarly grave states of emergency, the first response of the government has been to curtail the rights of some if not all citizens and aliens within our national boundaries, with no real resulting gain in national security. Crediting George W. Bush for his efforts to avoid violence or repression along strictly ethnic lines, Brown and company nonetheless fault the administration, and in particular Attorney General John Ashcroft, on several rights-related counts, for, as Brown adds, "the president's praiseworthy and successful efforts to avoid ethnic and religious violence were not matched by a comparable attempt to protect constitutional rights." One of the government's sins, in the view of contributors David Cole and Tanya E. Coke, is the increase in racial profiling to target suspected terrorists; as Cole remarks, "the safeguards of the criminal process are there for a reason, and whenever a democratic government imposes punishment or deprives persons of their liberty without adhering to these principles, it does more harm than good." Another, rejoins Reg Whitaker, is the creepy Orwellian Total Information Awareness program of Iran-Contra veteran Richard Poindexter, a financially and spiritually costly campaign that, Whitaker holds, simply will not work. Still others, writes Janlori Goldman, are the various measures aimed at combating bioterrorism, many sublimely ridiculous-such as the Homeland Security department's issuing of Baby Wipes and Dustbusters to every post office in the land. Useful, provocative reading for civil libertarians and rights activists. (Kirkus Reviews)

Details

ISBN1565848292
Short Title LOST LIBERTIES
Language English
ISBN-10 1565848292
ISBN-13 9781565848290
Media Book
Format Paperback
Year 2003
Imprint The New Press
Subtitle Ashcroft and the Assault on Personal Freedom
Place of Publication New York
Edited by Cynthia Brown
Pages 320
DOI 10.1604/9781565848290
Country of Publication United Kingdom
NZ Release Date 2003-09-18
Author Cynthia Brown
Publisher The New Press
DEWEY 342.73085
Audience Undergraduate
AU Release Date 2003-12-07
Publication Date 2003-10-16
UK Release Date 2003-10-16
Illustrations Illustrations, unspecified

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