IT= Information Terrorism?

The Criminal Justice and Public Order Act is now law, due in no small part to the consistent media portrayal of the likely victims of its many clauses as marginal groups. The Times wholly misjudged the situation when it called them "an alliance of New Age travellers, rock festival fans and squa...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Chris Atton
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: ISC Collective 1994-12-01
Series:Information for Social Change
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4603338
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spelling doaj-4d5bc6a12bfd4ee992ec27babd6d3e2b2021-03-14T17:48:45ZengISC CollectiveInformation for Social Change1364-694X1756-901X1994-12-011313110.5281/zenodo.4603338IT= Information Terrorism?Chris Atton0Edinburgh Napier UniversityThe Criminal Justice and Public Order Act is now law, due in no small part to the consistent media portrayal of the likely victims of its many clauses as marginal groups. The Times wholly misjudged the situation when it called them "an alliance of New Age travellers, rock festival fans and squatters." There have been exceptions, of course, offering a semblance of balance. The Independent noted that it would make "innocent people into enemies of the state", but in the main it was left to the public - with the support of groups such as Liberty - to protest against some of the most repressive legislation these islands have ever seen. By effectively removing the right to peaceful protest, by restricting movement, by giving the police unprecedented powers of stop and search, by removing the right to silence; we must ask: are we still living in a democracy?https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4603338criminal justicecriminal justice and public order actdemocratic rightsfreedom of speechlibertymarginal groups police powersright to expessionright to peaceful protestsocial justice
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chris Atton
spellingShingle Chris Atton
IT= Information Terrorism?
Information for Social Change
criminal justice
criminal justice and public order act
democratic rights
freedom of speech
liberty
marginal groups police powers
right to expession
right to peaceful protest
social justice
author_facet Chris Atton
author_sort Chris Atton
title IT= Information Terrorism?
title_short IT= Information Terrorism?
title_full IT= Information Terrorism?
title_fullStr IT= Information Terrorism?
title_full_unstemmed IT= Information Terrorism?
title_sort it= information terrorism?
publisher ISC Collective
series Information for Social Change
issn 1364-694X
1756-901X
publishDate 1994-12-01
description The Criminal Justice and Public Order Act is now law, due in no small part to the consistent media portrayal of the likely victims of its many clauses as marginal groups. The Times wholly misjudged the situation when it called them "an alliance of New Age travellers, rock festival fans and squatters." There have been exceptions, of course, offering a semblance of balance. The Independent noted that it would make "innocent people into enemies of the state", but in the main it was left to the public - with the support of groups such as Liberty - to protest against some of the most repressive legislation these islands have ever seen. By effectively removing the right to peaceful protest, by restricting movement, by giving the police unprecedented powers of stop and search, by removing the right to silence; we must ask: are we still living in a democracy?
topic criminal justice
criminal justice and public order act
democratic rights
freedom of speech
liberty
marginal groups police powers
right to expession
right to peaceful protest
social justice
url https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4603338
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