The Security of Freedom: Essays on Canada's Anti-terrorism BillThe Government of Canada's proposed anti-terrorism legislation, Bill C-36, contemplates dramatic changes to our law, in areas as diverse as criminal procedure, international relations, immigration, individual privacy, law enforcement, and charitable giving. In this collection, Canada's leading scholars in the areas of law and public policy address the potential impact of these changes on the rights and freedoms that Canadians enjoy. Based on papers presented at a conference organized by the Faculty of Law at the University of Toronto in November 2001, the essays in this book provide a permanent record of the vital legal debate surrounding Bill C-36. |
Contents
Introduction by Ronald J Daniels | 3 |
LawMaking | 39 |
Terrorism and the Risk Society | 63 |
Network Wars | 73 |
Governing Security Governing Through Security | 83 |
Terrorisms Challenge to the Constitutional Order | 93 |
CounterTerrorism Law and Policy | 111 |
The Dangers of a CharterProof and CrimeBased | 131 |
Is Privacy a Casualty of the War on Terrorism? | 251 |
Police Powers in Bill C36 | 269 |
Intelligence Requirements and AntiTerrorism Legislation | 287 |
Charities Registration Security Information | 321 |
An International Law Lesson | 341 |
PATRICK MACKLEM | 353 |
Ethnic | 367 |
AUDREY MACKLIN | 383 |
The New Terrorism Offences and the Criminal | 151 |
Political Association and the AntiTerrorism Bill | 173 |
Does | 195 |
Rule of Law or Executive Fiat? Bill C36 | 217 |
GARY T TROTTER | 239 |
EDWARD MORGAN | 405 |
LORNE SOSSIN | 419 |
Concluding Comments from the Department of Justice | 435 |
Annotated and Selected Excerpts of Bill C36 | 447 |