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Pre-Crime and Counter-Terrorism: Imaging Future Crime in the War on Terror

NCJ Number
228635
Journal
British Journal of Criminology Volume: 49 Issue: 5 Dated: September 2009 Pages: 628-645
Author(s)
Jude McCulloch; Sharon Pickering
Date Published
September 2009
Length
18 pages
Annotation
This article examines pre-crime in the context of counterterrorism.
Abstract
The imperative to prevent terrorist attacks has accelerated and consolidated a long established trend towards anticipating risks or threats and pursuing security in criminal justice. Counterterrorism advances a pre-crime logic aimed at preempting latent threats. Counterterrorism is uniquely suited to a shift to pre-crime frameworks because the term terrorism itself is preemptive, existing prior to and beyond any formal verdict. This article sought to contribute to understanding the emerging pre-crime society in the context of counterterrorism measures implemented after the 2001 attacks on the United States. It describes the contours of the shift from post to pre-crime in terms of changes to criminal justice implemented through domestic counterterrorism measures. It argues that the move to pre-crime that is taking place, embodies a trend towards integrating security into criminal justice and integrating national security into criminal justice. The article also attempts to trace the antecedents of the shift from post to pre-crime. It also argues that the shifts that have advanced under the mantle of counterterrorism can be traced through a number of interlinking historical trajectories, including the wars on crime and drugs, criminalization, and control and repression embodied in counter-insurgency practice and theory. The article concludes by identifying a number of challenges and opportunities for criminology in the shift from post-crime criminal justice to pre-crime national security. References