Abstract
It is now widely known that anti-terrorism laws, and especially the provision for indefinite preventive detention, have become part of western liberal criminal justice system. These laws create an anti-terrorism legal regime, which derogates from the principle of rule of law. However, there are scholars, for instance Charles Kennedy, who believe that anti-terrorism legal regimes have been deployed more in developing countries, for instance Pakistan, than in the West. In this article, we set out in brief a genealogical description of the Western anti-terrorism legal regime and the provision for indefinite preventive detention. Moreover, we demonstrate that the anti-terrorism legal regime in Pakistan and the provision for preventive detention has its origins in the British colonial security regime.

Syed Sami Raza, Ghazala Rafi. (2016) Indefinite Preventive Detention: An Anglo-American Legacy of the State of Exception, Pakistan Journal of Criminology, Volume-08, Issue-2.
  • Views 468
  • Downloads 32

Article Details

Volume
Issue
Type
Language