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Borderlines in Private Law

Edited by: William Day, Julius Grower
Price: £90.00

Lord Denning: Life, Law and Legacy



  


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Blurring Intelligence Crime: A Critical Forensics


ISBN13: 9789811603549
Published: March 2022
Publisher: Springer-Verlag
Country of Publication: Singapore
Format: Paperback (Hardback in 2021)
Price: £99.99



This book explores the conundrum that political fortune is dependent both on social order and big, constitutive crime. An act of outrageous harm depends on rules and protocols of crime scene discovery and forensic recovery, but political authorities review events for a social agenda, so that crime is designated according to the relative absence or presence of politics. In investigating this problem, the book introduces the concepts 'intelligence crime' and 'critical forensics.' It also reviews as an exemplar of this phenomenon 'apex crime,' a watershed event involving government in the support of a contested political and social order and its primary opponent as the obvious offender, which is then subject to a confirmation bias. Chapters feature case study analysis of a selection of familiar, high profile crimes in which the motives and actions of security or intelligence actors are considered as blurred or smeared depending on their interconnection in transactional political events, or according to friend/enemy status.

Subjects:
Criminal Law, Criminology
Contents:
Introduction: Blur and a Critical Forensics of Intelligence Crime
Forensic Certainties
Anti-forensics: Intelligence Crime and Blur
The Events of September 11, 2001: Apex Crime
Intelligence Crime 1: Let's not be too Hard on Ourselves
Intelligence Crime 2: 'Smear,' or Crimes Committed by 'them'
The Intelligence Crime Blur: Shaping Opinion and Smudging Records
Conclusion.