Is There a Right to Remain Silent?: Coercive Interrogation and the Fifth Amendment After 9/11

Is There a Right to Remain Silent?: Coercive Interrogation and the Fifth Amendment After 9/11

by Alan M. Dershowitz
Is There a Right to Remain Silent?: Coercive Interrogation and the Fifth Amendment After 9/11

Is There a Right to Remain Silent?: Coercive Interrogation and the Fifth Amendment After 9/11

by Alan M. Dershowitz

Hardcover

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Overview

The right to remain silent, guaranteed by the famed Fifth Amendment case, Miranda v. Arizona, is perhaps one of the most easily recognized and oft-quoted constitutional rights in American culture. Yet despite its ubiquity, there is widespread misunderstanding about the right and the protections promised under the Fifth Amendment.

In Is There a Right to Remain Silent? renowned legal scholar and bestselling author Alan Dershowitz reveals precisely why our Fifth Amendment rights matter and how they are being reshaped, limited, and in some cases revoked in the wake of 9/11. As security concerns have heightened, law enforcement has increasingly turned its attention from punishing to preventing crime. Dershowitz argues that recent Supreme Court decisions have opened the door to coercive interrogations—even when they amount to torture—if they are undertaken to prevent a crime, especially a terrorist attack, and so long as the fruits of such interrogations are not introduced into evidence at the criminal trial of the coerced person. In effect, the court has given a green light to all preventive interrogation methods. By deftly tracing the evolution of the Fifth Amendment from its inception in the Bill of Rights to the present day, where national security is the nation's first priority, Dershowitz puts forward a bold reinterpretation of the Fifth Amendment for the post-9/11 world. As the world we live in changes from a "deterrent state" to the heightened vigilance of today's "preventative state," our construction, he argues, must also change. We must develop a jurisprudence that will contain both substantive and procedural rules for all actions taken by government officials in order to prevent harmful conduct-including terrorism.

Timely, provocative, and incisively written, Is There a Right to Remain Silent? presents an absorbing look at one of our most essential constitutional rights at one of the most critical moments in recent American history.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780195307795
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 05/06/2008
Series: Inalienable Rights
Pages: 232
Product dimensions: 8.50(w) x 5.97(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

Alan M. Dershowitz is currently the Felix Frankfurter Professor of Law at the Harvard Law School. He appears frequently in the mainstream media as a commentator and analyst on a variety of issues, including national security, torture, civil liberties, and the Middle East peace process. He is the author of Rights From Wrongs: A Secular Theory of the Origins of Rights, America on Trial: Inside the Legal Battles That Transformed Our Nation, Shouting Fire, and Preemption.

Table of Contents

Introduction1. What is the Right Against Self-Recrimination? 2. The Supreme Court's Recent Decision3. The Limits of Textual Analysis in Constitutional Interpretation4. The Limits of Precedent: Which Way Does the Immunity Analogy Cut? 5. The Limits of Historical Inquiry6. The Privilege Since 17917. The Relevance of Constitutional Policies Underlying the Right8. A Matter of InterpretationConclusion: The Case for a Preventative State
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