1st Edition

The Legacy of 9/11 Transformations of Policing, Intelligence, and Counter-Terrorism

Edited By Ryan Shaffer, Jeffrey Kaplan Copyright 2024

    The Legacy of 9/11 is a retrospective about how policing, intelligence, and counter-terrorism have changed in the more than twenty years since the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.

    Bringing together scholars and practitioners, the book takes an interdisciplinary approach with fields including history, international relations, intelligence studies, law, and political science. It highlights how some challenges in policing, intelligence, and counter-terrorism brought about by the attacks have been resolved, how some persist and how others have been transformed. The chapters explore state and non-state actors’ actions, reactions, and overreactions that shape contemporary aspects of policing, intelligence, and terrorism. In all three worlds, intelligence, policing, and counter-terrorism, the 9/11 attacks changed how the threat of terrorism is perceived, approached, and effectively countered by learning from the mistakes that led to the success of the attacks and initiating a process on the national and international levels of integrating security structures and implementing changes that have made 9/11 the last large scale terrorist strike on U.S. soil. To illustrate these accomplishments and to highlight future challenges, the volume examines the inextricably connected elements of policing and intelligence in counter-terrorism as well as how counter-terrorism practitioners and jihadists were transformed by one day of attacks, more than twenty years ago.

    The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of Journal of Policing, Intelligence and Counter Terrorism.

    Introduction—The legacy of 9/11: a retrospective

    Ryan Shaffer and Jeffrey Kaplan

     

    1. Twenty years of countering jihadism in Western Europe: from the shock of 9/11 to ‘jihadism fatigue’

    Jeanine de Roy van Zuijdewijn and Edwin Bakker

     

    2. From 9/11 to the POST Act: democratic oversight of police surveillance technologies in New York City

    Michael Landon-Murray and Jeffrey Milliman

     

    3. How we went from 9/11 to lone actors

    Raffaello Pantucci

     

    4. 9/11’s legacy of unintended consequences

    John A. Gentry

     

    5. The analytic challenges of shifting to domestic terrorism

    Chris Quillen

     

    6. The expansion of the transnational counterterrorism order after 9/11

    Dan E. Stigall

     

    7. Homegrown tribalism: would-be al-Qaeda subway bombers and an ISIS defector

    Christopher P. Costa and Jeffrey Kaplan

     

    8. A world remade: 9/11, America and the western world

    Jeffrey Kaplan

    Biography

    Ryan Shaffer has a PhD in history with expertise in extremism and security. He has published hundreds of articles and reviews in numerous journals. His books include African Intelligence Services: Early Postcolonial and Contemporary Challenges and The Handbook of African Intelligence Cultures.

    Jeffrey Kaplan is currently the Distinguished Fellow at the Danube Institute in Budapest and the External Expert at the Islamic Cultural, Educational, and Scientific Organization (ICESCO) in Rabat, Morocco. He is the author or editor of thirty books and anthologies and over 100 journal articles and anthology chapters. He has researched and taught in many countries, most recently Hungary, China, Saudi Arabia, and Pakistan.