Forcese Craig
Forcese-- Craig
Stumbling Toward Total Information Awareness: The Security of Canada Information Sharing Act
Neutrality Law, Anti-terrorism and Foreign Fighters: Legal Solutions to the Recruitment of Canadians to Foreign Insurgencies
Terrorist Babble and the Limits of Law: Assessing a Prospective Canadian Terrorism Glorification Offence
Author(s): Forcese– Craig | Roach– Kent
Legislating in Fearful and Politicized Times: The Limits of Bill C-51’s Disruption Powers in Making us Safer
Author(s): Forcese-- Craig | Roach-- Kent
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Geography: Canada, North America
Year: 2015
Subjects: Authoritarianism, Democracy, Human rights and civil liberties, Legislation, Policy, Politics and Government, Security policy
Description:
About the Book: The violent attacks on journalists at Charlie Hebdo and shoppers in a Jewish supermarket in Paris in January 2015 left seventeen dead and shocked the world. In – …
Law, Logarithms and Liberties: Legal Issues Arising from CSE’s Metadata Program
TSAS WP16-04: Bridging the National Security Accountability Gap: A Three-Part System to Modernize Canada’s Inadequate Review of National Security
Author(s): Forcese-- Craig | Roach-- Kent
Publisher: TSAS
Geography: Canada
Year: 2016
Subjects: Anti-terrorism legislation, Intelligence, Law, Legislation, National security, Politics and Government, Security policy
Description:
This paper examines existing challenges associated with the current structure of national security accountability review in Canada. It then draws on best practices in other jurisdictions to propose a systematic – …
TSAS WP15-02: Terrorist Babble and the Limits of the Law: Assessing a Prospective Canadian Terrorism Glorification Offence
Author(s): Forcese-- Craig | Roach-- Kent
Publisher: TSAS
Geography: Canada, Western Europe
Year: 2015
Subjects: Anti-terrorism legislation, Criminal Justice, Homegrown terrorism, Human rights and civil liberties, Lone wolf, Political violence, Recruitment, Religious extremism, Violent extremism
Description:
Since 2007, the Canadian government has repeatedly expressed interest in a terrorism “glorification” offence, responding to internet materials regarded by officials as terrorist propaganda and as promoting “radicalization”. In the – …