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Callamard, Agnes: "Religion, Terrorism and Speech in a ‘Post-Charlie Hebdo’ World." In: Religion & Human Rights 10.3 (2015), S. 207–228. Added by: joachim (2017-06-14 11:22) |
Resource type: Journal Article Languages: English Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1163/18710328-12341288 BibTeX citation key: Callamard2015 Email resource to friend View all bibliographic details |
Categories: General Keywords: "Charlie Hebdo", France, Justice, Kulturpolitik, Religion, Terrorism Creators: Callamard Collection: Religion & Human Rights |
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Abstract |
This article reviews the policy responses and the freedom of expression case law following the Charlie Hebdo attack. It unpacks the ‘Countering Violent Extremism’ framework from a freedom of expression standpoint and analyses court decisions related to glorification of terrorism and incitement to hatred with a particular focus on France and the United States as well as Russia, and Scandinavia. It shows the determination of governments to tackle the non-violent “ideological” bases of “terrorism”, and to treat religion as largely a public order issue. It concludes that in a post-Charlie Hebdo world, courts also have taken short cuts, instrumentalising not only speech to perceived higher needs, but judicial reasoning and practices as well.
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