Preventing terrorism in the long term the disutility of racial profiling in preventing crime and the counterproductive nature of ethnic and religious profiling in counterterrorism policing

Approved for public release, distribution unlimited === After the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001, the desire of Americans to feel secure made ethnic and religious profiling a tempting security trade-off. Generalizations about Arabs and Muslims as terrorists seemed to lead to an increasing p...

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Main Author: Sandomir, David Christopher
Other Authors: Dahl, Erik, J.
Published: Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10945/4355
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spelling ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-43552014-12-04T04:08:37Z Preventing terrorism in the long term the disutility of racial profiling in preventing crime and the counterproductive nature of ethnic and religious profiling in counterterrorism policing Sandomir, David Christopher Dahl, Erik, J. Baylouny, Anne Marie Naval Postgraduate School Approved for public release, distribution unlimited After the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001, the desire of Americans to feel secure made ethnic and religious profiling a tempting security trade-off. Generalizations about Arabs and Muslims as terrorists seemed to lead to an increasing practice of singling out individuals who look Arab or appear to be Muslim in entry-exit systems and in counterterrorist investigations. Civil liberties and Muslim advocacy groups immediately cried foul as accusations of profiling began to surface in the media and various government reports. Today, the main emphasis of the debate continues to focus on civil liberties. The aim of this thesis is to take a fresh perspective on profiling in counterterrorist-operations and demonstrate that profiling is actually counterproductive to an effective long-term counterterrorism strategy. This thesis first highlights major findings on the usefulness of racial profiling in criminal policing. It then examines issues of ethnic identity and the grand strategy of Islamic terrorist organizations and illustrates the counterproductive nature of ethnic and religious profiling. It will also demonstrate that while complaints of ethnic profiling persist within the Muslim community, the technique does not appear to have played a role in the disruption of actual terrorist plots in the United States. 2012-03-14T17:41:38Z 2012-03-14T17:41:38Z 2009-12 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10945/4355 503147792 Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
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sources NDLTD
description Approved for public release, distribution unlimited === After the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001, the desire of Americans to feel secure made ethnic and religious profiling a tempting security trade-off. Generalizations about Arabs and Muslims as terrorists seemed to lead to an increasing practice of singling out individuals who look Arab or appear to be Muslim in entry-exit systems and in counterterrorist investigations. Civil liberties and Muslim advocacy groups immediately cried foul as accusations of profiling began to surface in the media and various government reports. Today, the main emphasis of the debate continues to focus on civil liberties. The aim of this thesis is to take a fresh perspective on profiling in counterterrorist-operations and demonstrate that profiling is actually counterproductive to an effective long-term counterterrorism strategy. This thesis first highlights major findings on the usefulness of racial profiling in criminal policing. It then examines issues of ethnic identity and the grand strategy of Islamic terrorist organizations and illustrates the counterproductive nature of ethnic and religious profiling. It will also demonstrate that while complaints of ethnic profiling persist within the Muslim community, the technique does not appear to have played a role in the disruption of actual terrorist plots in the United States.
author2 Dahl, Erik, J.
author_facet Dahl, Erik, J.
Sandomir, David Christopher
author Sandomir, David Christopher
spellingShingle Sandomir, David Christopher
Preventing terrorism in the long term the disutility of racial profiling in preventing crime and the counterproductive nature of ethnic and religious profiling in counterterrorism policing
author_sort Sandomir, David Christopher
title Preventing terrorism in the long term the disutility of racial profiling in preventing crime and the counterproductive nature of ethnic and religious profiling in counterterrorism policing
title_short Preventing terrorism in the long term the disutility of racial profiling in preventing crime and the counterproductive nature of ethnic and religious profiling in counterterrorism policing
title_full Preventing terrorism in the long term the disutility of racial profiling in preventing crime and the counterproductive nature of ethnic and religious profiling in counterterrorism policing
title_fullStr Preventing terrorism in the long term the disutility of racial profiling in preventing crime and the counterproductive nature of ethnic and religious profiling in counterterrorism policing
title_full_unstemmed Preventing terrorism in the long term the disutility of racial profiling in preventing crime and the counterproductive nature of ethnic and religious profiling in counterterrorism policing
title_sort preventing terrorism in the long term the disutility of racial profiling in preventing crime and the counterproductive nature of ethnic and religious profiling in counterterrorism policing
publisher Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10945/4355
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