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University of New South Wales Faculty of Law Research Series |
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Last Updated: 16 February 2013
What is Terrorism? Assessing Domestic Legal Definitions
Keiran Hardy, University of New South
Wales
George Williams, University of New South
Wales
This paper is available for download at Available at
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2213332
Citation
This paper was published in 16 UCLA J. INT‘L L. & FOR. AFF. 77 (2011). This paper may also be referenced as [2013] UNSWLRS 16.
Abstract
Anti-terrorism powers were largely enacted as an
emergency response to September 11 and later terrorist attacks, and yet they now
appear to be a permanent feature of domestic law. How governments apply these
anti-terrorism powers depends upon the scope of statutory
definitions of
terrorism. This article develops three key criteria for assessing the
appropriateness of definitions of terrorism
in domestic legislation. The first
two criteria relate to the principle of legality. They require definitions of
terrorism to be
drafted in language which (1) gives reasonable notice of the
prohibited conduct, (2) confines the operation of legislation to its
intended
purposes, and (3) is drafted consistently in comparable jurisdictions. The
article then tests seven definitions of terrorism
against these three criteria.
It focuses on legal definitions of terrorism in the United Kingdom, Canada,
Australia, South Africa,
New Zealand, India, and the United States. The article
not only examines the statutory language used to define terrorism in each
jurisdiction, but also examines how these definitions have been applied and
interpreted since their enactment. This testing process
suggests that much
remains to be done to improve the clarity, scope and consistency of definitions
of terrorism in domestic legislation.
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