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3 December 2008
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The Changing Landscape of European Liberty and Security 

Published: Monday 19 February 2007    | Updated: Friday 8 June 2007   

In this Centre for European Policy Studies (CEPS) interim report, Didier Bigo, Sergio Carrera, Elspeth Guild and R.B.J. Walker present the findings of a major CEPS project aimed at assessing the balance between civil liberties and security preoccupations, addressing issues such as the development of surveillance technologies and their impact on freedom, and fears related to Muslim immigrants.

The CHALLENGEexternal project seeks to provide a critical assessment of the liberties of citizens and others living within the EU and how they are affected by the proliferation of debate concerning insecurity and the exchange of new techniques of surveillance and control.

The authors write: "Five years after 9/11, no one doubts that liberal polities have resorted to many illiberal practices, or that these practices have been legitimised by sweeping claims about global dangers. Their scale is both revealed and obscured by inquiries into the war in Iraq. Serious dangers are apparent, but who can now say that the connection between such dangers and the mobilisation of tougher practices of security and constraints on liberal freedoms is clear?...The tendency to focus narrowly on the conflict in Iraq obscures a broader pattern of surveillance in which illiberal practices are being justified by a complex field of routinised transactions among many transnationally organised agencies, institutions and interests, one that also thrives on weak claims to knowledge and apocalyptic visions of a dangerous future."

To read the full report, click hereexternal [FR]Pdf external

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