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Common Threat and Common Response? The European Union's Counter-Terrorism Strategy and its Problems
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2007
Year
European LawLawEuropean Union LawHomeland SecuritySocial SciencesEuropean Community LawPublic PolicySocietal FragilityInternational RelationsSecurity TheoryEuropean UnionCommon ThreatTerrorism FinancingEuropean IssueCommon DefinitionNational SecurityCommon ResponseBusinessCrisis ManagementPolitical ScienceInternational Institutions
Abstract On the basis of an analysis of the European Union's common definition of the post-9/11 terrorist threat, this article provides a critical assessment of the EU's response. The EU has arrived at a reasonably specific definition of the common threat that avoids simplistic reductions and is a response that is sufficiently multidimensional to address the different aspects – internal and external, legislative and operational, repressive and preventive – of this threat. Yet the definition is undermined by differences between national threat perceptions. The preference for instruments of cooperation and coordination rather than integration, and poor implementation are having a negative impact on the effectiveness of the common response, the legitimacy of which is also weakened by limited parliamentary and judicial control.
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