Resistance to Tyranny versus the Public Good: John Locke and Counter-Terror Law in the United Kingdom

Turner, Ian David orcid iconORCID: 0000-0002-8012-1480 (2024) Resistance to Tyranny versus the Public Good: John Locke and Counter-Terror Law in the United Kingdom. Democracy and Security, 20 (4). pp. 321-346. ISSN 1741-9166

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1080/17419166.2024.2360895

Abstract

John Locke was a social contract theorist. He envisaged that individuals had domiciled in a state of nature, enjoying natural rights. But because of the insecurities of the natural state, individuals transitioned to the stability of civil society, guaranteed by a sovereign. There were fetters on the sovereign, however, such as passing laws for the public good. Is modern legislation to counter terrorism for the public good? Locke also expressly granted a right of resistance on the people. But is this right terrorism? Reflecting on these principles, this study examines counter-terror statutes and determines whether Locke would support them.


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