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The wrong kind of law to prevent terrorism

The Prevent programme will cause real problems for universities, say Phil Lindan and Meriel Schindler

Published on
September 18, 2015
Last updated
February 16, 2017
law, legal, statue, justice

Yesterday, Jo Johnson told the National Union of Students to drop its opposition to the Prevent counter-terrorism strategy, saying that the programme was 鈥渘ot about oppressing free speech or stifling academic freedom, it is about making sure that radical views and ideas are not given the oxygen they need to flourish鈥.聽

In other words, you could say, it is about stopping certain people saying certain things. If that meant stopping hate speech, or incitement, it could be lauded - but Prevent is too blunt an instrument to achieve that. Its operation in universities will see debate stifled, muted, distorted or stopped altogether.聽

But free speech is the crucible in which to assay ideas. 鈥淪unlight is said to be the best of disinfectants,鈥 said former US聽 Supreme Court justice Louis Dembitz Brandeis. Prevent will force dangerous minds into the shadows.

Universities are gearing up with policies, training and monitoring in order to discharge their general duty to 鈥渉ave due regard to the need to prevent people from being drawn into terrorism鈥. They are less prepared for the legal troubles that will follow.

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Lecturers will be obliged to report students at risk of 鈥渞adicalisation鈥, a portmanteau term susceptible to glib stereotyping, and fear of radical ideas themselves. If a lecturer refuses to follow policies and make reports, is that a disciplinary matter? Is a Muslim student taking too much interest in cryptography to be reported? Is it possible at all to be trained to reliably spot the signs of someone at risk of being drawn into terrorism 鈥 or isn't that the province of the security services?聽

It is an odd duty indeed for an academic to bear.

Prevent modifies and curtails basic rights. That鈥檚 not new 鈥 the legitimate curtailment of freedoms is an essential part of the balancing of those rights. But Prevent seems to be aimed at the wrong targets, and its clumsy deadening hand will breach those rights unacceptably and unlawfully.

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If 鈥渉ard cases make bad law鈥, then this bad law will make hard cases too 鈥 and plenty of them.

Phil Lindan is an associate and Meriel Schindler is a partner at law firm Withers LLP.

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