Parliament’s Secret War (Hart Studies in Security and Justice #2)
Description
The invasion of Iraq in 2003, and the Coalition Government's failure to win parliamentary approval for armed intervention in Syria in 2013, mark a period of increased scrutiny of the process by which the UK engages in armed conflict. For much of the media and civil society there now exists a constitutional convention which mandates that the Government consults Parliament before commencing hostilities. This is celebrated as representing a redistribution of power from the executive towards a more legitimate, democratic institution. This book offers a critical inquiry into Parliament's role in the war prerogative since the beginning of the twentieth century, evaluating whether the UK's decisions to engage in conflict meet the recognised standards of good governance: accountability, transparency and participation. The analysis reveals a number of persistent problems in the decision-making process, including Parliament's lack of access to relevant information, government 'legalisation' of parliamentary debates which frustrates broader discussions of political legitimacy, and the skewing of debates via the partial public disclosure of information based upon secret intelligence. The book offers solutions to these problems to reinvigorate parliamentary discourse and to address government withholding of classified information. It is essential reading for anyone interested in war powers, the relationship between international law and domestic politics, and the role of the Westminster Parliament in questions of national security.
Other Books in Series
National Security Constitutionalism in the Commonwealth Five Eyes States (Hart Studies in Security and Justice)
Surveillance, Privacy and Trans-Atlantic Relations (Hart Studies in Security and Justice)
National Security Constitutionalism in the Commonwealth Five Eyes States (Hart Studies in Security and Justice)
Surveillance, Privacy and Trans-Atlantic Relations (Hart Studies in Security and Justice #1)
Coercive Human Rights: Positive Duties to Mobilise the Criminal Law Under the Echr (Hart Studies in Security and Justice)
Parliament's Secret War (Hart Studies in Security and Justice)
Security and Human Rights: (Second Edition) (Hart Studies in Security and Justice)
The Constitutional Structure of Europe’s Area of ‘Freedom, Security and Justice’ and the Right to Justification (Hart Studies in Security and Justice)
The National Security Constitution (Hart Studies in Security and Justice)
The Offences Against the State ACT 1939 at 80: A Model Counter-Terrorism Act? (Hart Studies in Security and Justice)
Offences Against the State ACT 1939 at 80: A Model Counter-Terrorism Act? (Hart Studies in Security and Justice)
Coercive Human Rights: Positive Duties to Mobilise the Criminal Law Under the Echr (Hart Studies in Security and Justice)
Permanent States of Emergency and the Rule of Law: Constitutions in an Age of Crisis (Hart Studies in Security and Justice #3)
Permanent States of Emergency and the Rule of Law: Constitutions in an Age of Crisis (Hart Studies in Security and Justice)
The Constitutional Structure of Europe's Area of 'Freedom, Security and Justice' and the Right to Justification (Hart Studies in Security and Justice)
Securing Legality (Hart Studies in Security and Justice)
Juridifying Security (Hart Studies in Security and Justice)
