PREFACE
Edward M. Iacobucci and Stephen J. Toope
PART I: Religion, Culture and Pluralism
After Paris: Liberalism, Free Speech, Religion, and Immigration in Europe
Randall Hansen
Free Speech and Civility in Pluralist Societies
Simone Chambers
The Status of Muslim Minorities Following the Paris Attacks
Jeffrey G. Reitz
A Tale of Two Massacres: Charlie Hebdo and Utoya Island
Mohammad Fadel
The (In)Secure Citizen: Islamophobia and the Natives of the Republic after Paris
Ruth Marshall
Evil as a Noun: Dichotomous Avoidance of Political Analysis
Mark G. Toulouse
The Search for Equal Membership in the Age of Terror
Ayelet Shachar
Charlie Hebdo and the Politics of Fear: Questions without Answers
Anna C. Korteweg
PART II: Geopolitical Effects
What Does It Mean to Be at War?
Arthur Ripstein
After the Paris Attacks: Long Views Backwards and Forwards
Ronald W. Pruessen
International Law and Transnational Terrorism
Jutta Brunnée
Looking Back and Looking Forward: Authenticity through Purification
Janice Gross Stein
PART III: From Headlines to Analysis: The Media
After The Paris Attacks: Reflections on the Media
Natasha Fatah
Journalism and Political Decision-Making in an Age of Crises
Brian Stewart
PART IV: Canada: Security and Society
Legislating in Fearful and Politicized Times: The Limits of Bill C-51’s Disruption Powers in Making Us Safer
Kent Roach and Craig Forcese
What Lessons Have We Learned about Speech in the Aftermath of the Paris Attacks?
David Schneiderman
C-51 and the Canadian Security and Intelligence Community: Finding the Balance for Security and Rights Protections
Wesley Wark
Freedom and Security: The Gordian Knot for Democracies
Hugh Segal
Anti-Terrorism’s Privacy Sleight-of-Hand: Bill C-51 and the Erosion of Privacy
Lisa M. Austin
Who Knows What Evils Lurk in the Shadows?
Ronald Deibert
The Complex Ecology of Policing, Trust, and Community Partnerships in Counterterrorism
Ron Levi and Janice Gross Stein
Postscript: The Paris Attacks as a Turning Point?
Stephen J. Toope