Security, Citizenship and Human Rights examines counter-terrorism, immigration, citizenship, human rights, 'equalities' and the shifting discourses of 'shared values' and human rights in contemporary Britain. The book argues that British citizenship and human rights policy is being remade and remoulded around public security and that this process could be detrimental to 'our' sense of citizenship, shared values and commitment to human rights.
Preface Introduction: Value Trouble Pre-emptive Securities - Border Controls and Preventative Counter-Terrorism Building a Consensus on 'National Security': Terrorism, Human Rights and 'Core Values' Restoring Public Confidence - Managed Migration, Racialization and Earned Citizenship Security, Citizenship and Responsibilities - Debates on a Bill of Rights in the UK Belonging Together or Belonging to the Polity? Shared Values, Britishness and Patriotism Patriots of the Present and the Future - Ethical Solidarity and Equalities in Uncertain Times Afterword
DEREK MCGHEE is Professor of Sociology at the University of Southampton, UK. He is the author of The End of Multiculturalism? Terrorism, Integration and Human Rights; Intolerant Britain? Hate, Citizenship and Difference and Homosexuality, Law and Resistance.