Administrative / Constitutional Law

Parliament's Secret War

Edited by Veronika Fikfak · Hayley J. Hooper
Hart Publishing February 2018

Specifications

ISBN-13
9781509902873
Publisher
Hart Publishing
Publication
February 2018
Format
Hardback
Jurisdiction
U.K. ? Countri(es) for reference only

Also available as

Details

Since the Iraq War in 2003 and the Conservative-Liberal Democrat Coalition Government's failure to command the support of the House of Commons for military intervention in Syria in 2013 there has been increased interest in how Parliament is involved in decisions to go to war.

For much of the media and civil society the House of Commons' involvement represents a wresting of power from the Executive by a more legitimate, democratic institution. Moreover, it has also been suggested that the consultation of the House of Commons before the commencement of hostilities represents an emerging constitutional convention.

This monograph offers a critical inquiry into the current arrangements around the operation of the war prerogative. In doing so, it offers the first in-depth conceptual analysis of the nature of the British Parliament's role in respect of the war prerogative.

The book is the first rigorous attempt to classify, explain, and evaluate parliamentary engagement with war powers in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.

It reveals that the constitutional functions of Parliament are being frustrated by lack of access to relevant information, a practice which is usually justified by the Executive on the basis that providing relevant materials in open parliamentary sessions would be damaging to national security or international relations.

Table of Contents

1. Parliament’s Secret War 1
Veronika Fikfak and Hayley J Hooper
A. The Role of the House of Commons in War Powers Decisions: An Historical View
B. From Discretion to Democratisation
C. Roadmap of the Book
D. Methodology: The Political Constitution and Evidence-Based Public Law
2. A Legal War?
Veronika Fikfak
A. Use of Force as an International Legal Question
B. Bringing the War Question Home
C. Use of Force as a Domestic Question
D. The Implications of Linking International Legality to Parliament’s Constitutional Role on War
E. Shining a Light on the Subjugation of Politics
3. The Convention as a Battlefield
Veronika Fikfak
A. The Role of Conventions in the UK Constitutional Sphere
B. The Timing of the Engagement
C. Parliament’s Hollow Veto Power
D. Emergencies, Drones and Special Forces
E. Unrealised Accountability
4. The Deployment of Secrecy
Hayley J Hooper
A. Groupthink and Information Asymmetry
B. Complete Asymmetry: Refusing Debates and Making Secret Pre-commitments
C. Partial Asymmetry: Selective Disclosures
D. Reforming the Intelligence Machinery: An Incomplete Solution
E. Towards a New Nomenclature of Secrecy
5. Re-arming Parliament: Fostering Politics
Veronika Fikfak and Hayley J Hooper
A. Moving Beyond the Standard Solutions
B. Creating Space for Politics and Equipping Parliament for Deliberation
C. Voting Within a Culture of Justification
6. Closed Intelligence Sessions
Hayley J Hooper
A. Chilcot’s Proposal for Parliamentary Scrutiny of Intelligence Material
B. The Alternative: Closed Intelligence Sessions of the Whole House of Commons
C. Justifications for Initiating a Closed Intelligence Session
D. Controlling Abuse of Closed Intelligence Sessions
E. Security Considerations
F. Inclusive Secrecy, Transparency, Participation and Accountability
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