Hostname: page-component-745bb68f8f-s22k5 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2025-02-11T08:08:48.981Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Religion and Terrorism: The Prevent Duty

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 August 2021

Rebecca Riedel*
Affiliation:
Doctoral Student and Convenor, Interfaith Legal Advisers’ Network School of Law and Politics, Cardiff University
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

The Terrorism Act 2000 recognises that religion may be a force for bad in its definition of ‘terrorism’: ‘The use or threat of action … designed to influence a government or to intimidate the public or a section of the public … for the purpose of advancing a political, religious or ideological cause.’ ‘Radicalisation’ is the process by which an individual becomes involved in terrorism, and it is the statutory Prevent Duty, introduced under the Counter-Terrorism and Security Act 2015, that is the UK's current means of tackling radicalisation. Under the duty, specified authorities (such as schools, police, etc) must have due regard to preventing people from being ‘drawn into terrorism’. This article addresses an often-neglected area in the ongoing legal debate surrounding the statutory Prevent Duty: the religious dimension. It suggests that religion is at the centre of the Prevent Duty and that the formulation of the duty was stimulated by religion – namely, Islamist extremism and radicalisation. It will discuss the ways in which the Prevent Duty can be criticised; that it has an impact on human rights that it is potentially discriminatory towards Muslims; and that it does not clearly distinguish between permissible radical religion and impermissible harmful religion. The article concludes by suggesting that religion plays an important part in the understanding of extremism and radicalisation.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Ecclesiastical Law Society

The value of religion to society is axiomatic. The Minister for Faith stated in 2015: ‘We all need to recognise that faith groups are a tremendous force for good; serving and supporting the downtrodden and marginalised in society, and bringing communities together’; it is essential, therefore, ‘to ensure it remains at the heart of our shared national life … supporting the grassroots work of churches, mosques, synagogues, and temples’.Footnote 2 In turn, law provides a network of facilities enabling religious groups and their members to contribute in their many ways to the common good. However, under Article 9 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), while the freedom to manifest religion in worship, teaching, practice and observance is protected, its exercise may be subject to limitations. The courts accept, therefore, that

although religion may be beneficial both to individuals and to the community, it is capable also of being divisive and, sometimes, of becoming dangerously so. No one who lives in a country such as ours, with a community of diverse ethnic and racial origins and of diverse cultures and religions, can be unaware of this.

Moreover, ‘Religion can bind communities together’ but ‘secrecy in religious practices provides the soil in which suspicions and unfounded prejudices can take root and grow; openness in religious practices, on the other hand, can dispel suspicions and contradict prejudices’.Footnote 3

That a religion may be a force for bad is recognised in the Terrorism Act 2000 definition of ‘terrorism’: ‘the use or threat of action … designed to influence a government or to intimidate the public or a section of the public … for the purpose of advancing a political, religious or ideological cause’.Footnote 4 The Prevent Duty is designed to prevent people from being ‘drawn into terrorism’. It also has much to say about religion.Footnote 5 The first section of this article sets out the Prevent Duty, in statute and guidance, and its treatment of religion; the second evaluates how the Prevent Duty deals with religion.

THE PREVENT DUTY AND ITS TREATMENT OF RELIGION

The ‘Prevent Strategy’ was presented to the UK Government in July 2011, by the then Home Secretary, Theresa May, as part of the counter-terrorism strategy (known as CONTEST), in response to the ‘highly likely’ threat of a terrorist attack – and the argument that ‘the greatest threat comes from Al Qa'ida, its affiliates and like-minded groups’.Footnote 6 The strategy was one of four components of CONTEST (prevent, pursue, protect and prepare), ‘to reduce the risk’ of terrorism, to ‘stop terrorist attacks’ and to prevent ‘people becoming terrorists or supporting terrorism’.Footnote 7

Combating ‘radicalisation’ was a key feature of the Prevent Strategy: ‘the process by which a person comes to support terrorism and forms of extremism leading to terrorism’. According to the strategy, a ‘radicaliser’ is one who encourages others to develop or adopt beliefs and views supportive of terrorism and extremism leading to it. The radicaliser does so at ‘radicalising locations’ (both public, eg ‘university campuses and mosques’, and private, eg ‘homes, cafes and bookstores’), using ‘radicalising materials’ (eg videos).Footnote 8 The strategy explicitly associated one form of radicalisation with the ‘single narrative’ of ‘Islamist’ extremism, a ‘particular interpretation of religion, history and politics’. This ‘connects “grievances” at a local and/or global level, reinforces the portrayal of Muslims as victims of Western injustice and thereby purports to legitimise terrorism’. It also ‘combines fact, fiction, emotion and religion, and manipulates discontent about local and international issues’.Footnote 9 Radicalisation may involve a ‘rejection of a cohesive, integrated, multi-faith society’ and combating it requires ‘developing a sense of belonging to this country and support for our core values’, and working with faith groups. The strategy therefore placed ‘faith … at the forefront of work to tackle radicalisation’, and it called for ‘counter-radicalisation’, an ‘activity aimed at a group of people intended to dissuade them from engaging in terrorism-related activity’ and ‘de-radicalisation’ to effect ‘cognitive and/or behavioural change leading to a new outlook on terrorism and/or disengagement from it’.Footnote 10

The Prevent Strategy recognised that previous work had ‘sometimes given the impression that Muslim communities as a whole are more “vulnerable” to radicalisation than other faith or ethnic groups’. This needed remedying and so Prevent ‘must not seem to pass judgment on faith or to suggest only a particular kind of faith is appropriate or acceptable’.Footnote 11 In turn, the Carlile Review of the Prevent Strategy recognised that it ‘must be delivered in an atmosphere and legal setting strongly compliant with civil liberties’. Importantly, therefore:

It must be achieved without in any way undermining the value and proper values of British Muslims or their religion, or of any other group of people identifiable by a shared faith or other connection. Policy must be free from allegations of snooping, targeting communities or any other form of discrimination. It is a given that Muslims are no less law-abiding and no less British than any other citizens. Terrorism, as well as a crime, is an aberration disliked by the vast majority, whatever their faith or none.Footnote 12

To this end, the Carlile Review considered it essential to develop ‘a dialogue with faith institutions which are under threat from extremist and terrorist organisations, irrespective of the faith concerned’. This would include ‘encouragement of faith groups and organisations to play a full role in local Prevent coordination groups’; taking law enforcement action when faith groups or other organisations support terrorism; and ‘challenging any faith groups regarded as extremist’.Footnote 13 In other words, the Prevent Strategy applies to all faith groups, not simply Muslims.

Following the roll-out of the Prevent Strategy, and in response to the growing threat from terrorism highlighted in parliamentary debate,Footnote 14 a statutory ‘general duty’ was introduced by the Counter-Terrorism and Extremism Act 2015: ‘A specified authority must, in the exercise of its functions, have due regard to the need to prevent people from being drawn into terrorism.’Footnote 15 The statutory Prevent Duty is imposed on those ‘specified authorities’ which are listed in Schedule 6 to the 2015 Act, including authorities in local government (eg a county or district council), criminal justice (eg a prison governor), education and childcare (eg the proprietor of various categories of school), health and social care (eg an NHS trust) and the police (eg chief officer of police, and police and crime commissioners). The secretary of state has a power to specify other authorities to which the duty attaches but may not extend the duty to, inter alia, the General Synod of the Church of England.Footnote 16

Needless to say, religious organisations with status as voluntary associations under private law are not listed in the statutory schedule of specified (public) authorities and so are not subject to the statutory Prevent Duty. However, faith schools (educational institutions designated as having a religious character) are understood as specified authorities under the 2015 Act and so are subject to the statutory Prevent Duty.Footnote 17 In contrast, places of religious worship are not. Indeed, in 2015 it was debated whether places of worship were to be considered as educational institutions for the purposes of the Prevent Duty but this was rejected for the very reason that religious faith and worship are private, not public, matters.Footnote 18 Nevertheless, some religious associations voluntarily adopt the principle of the Prevent Duty, for example within wider provision for safeguarding the vulnerable. For instance, within Judaism, the Finchley Reform Synagogue has its Safeguarding Children and Child Protection Policy (2016), which seeks, inter alia, to implement ‘the statutory Prevent duty to keep children safe from the dangers of radicalisation and extremism’.Footnote 19 Similarly, Palmers Green Mosque Community and Education Centre provides in its ‘Guidelines on speakers and imams’ that, among other things, a visiting speaker must not discuss highly sensitive areas of Islam or promote or propagate any illegal activities, discrimination or hate crime.Footnote 20 The Office for Standards in Education, Children's Services and Skills (Ofsted) has also raised concerns about radicalisation of children in unregistered religious schools, such as madrassas.Footnote 21

Under the 2015 Act, the Home Secretary may issue guidance to specified authorities about the discharge of the Prevent Duty and they must have regard to the guidance in carrying out that duty.Footnote 22 The Prevent Duty Guidance states that ‘the authorities should place an appropriate amount of weight on the need to prevent people being drawn into terrorism when they consider all the other factors relevant to how they carry out their usual functions’. The guidance seeks ‘to assist authorities to decide what this means in practice’.Footnote 23 It expects them, for instance: to understand ‘the risk of radicalisation’ and ‘challenge the extremist ideology that can be associated with it’; to engage in training and ‘productive co-operation, in particular with local Prevent co-ordinators, the police and local authorities’; and to ensure that their front-line staff understand radicalisation and why people may be vulnerable to being drawn into terrorism as a consequence of it. They should also share personal information so that a person at risk of radicalisation is given support (eg on the Channel programme: see more below), but simultaneously protect their ‘rights’ (eg under the Data Protection Act 1998, as amended 2018, and Human Rights Act 1998); maintain appropriate records to show compliance with the duty and provide reports when requested; and engage with support from and monitoring by the Home Office, as well as inspection. The Prevent Duty Guidance also provides ‘sector-specific’ guidance for organisations such as local authorities, schools and registered childcare providers, the health sector, police and prisons, where initial reception and induction interviews should ‘establish concerns in relation to any form of extremism’ including ‘faith based’ extremism.Footnote 24

Further work has been done on radicalisation. For example, a report of 2015, relied on in court proceedings that year (see below),Footnote 25 provided ‘a review of relevant scientific evidence on radicalisation’. Hayden J found the report ‘helpful’ and that ‘the information should be more widely available within the profession and beyond’: ‘these generic descriptions, within the report, are strikingly reflective of what I have seen in this Court’.Footnote 26 Once again, religion has a part to play: ‘Radicalisation is a complex and dynamic process which results in individuals coming to embrace a violent ideology in support of a political or religious cause.’ The process is not linear but ‘an often erratic experience’. Crucially, ‘There is no single root cause of radicalisation’ – over 200 factors may contribute to it. These include: the interaction of personal factors (eg individual susceptibility) and environmental factors (eg social relationships, community attitudes); static elements such as demographic factors (those aged 15–24 are most at risk, and males are usually more so than females); dynamic factors such as social relationships (and a sense of belonging can be a powerful incentive for becoming and staying involved with a radical group); latching on to an extremist ideology (and incorporating elements of it into self-identity); psychological vulnerability (not to be confused with mental illness or psychological problems) including issues of grievance, perceived injustice, identity, anger, revenge and a quest for significance. In short, ‘radicalisation is not simply the sum of different factors, but rather … the different factors seem to play a role at different stages in the process’.Footnote 27

The Prevent Duty Guidance specifically links terrorism to Islamist extremism. Like the strategy, it defines ‘extremism’ as ‘vocal or active opposition to fundamental British values, including democracy, the rule of law, individual liberty and mutual respect and tolerance of different faiths and beliefs’.Footnote 28 According to the guidance, the most significant threat ‘is currently from terrorist organisations in Syria and Iraq, and Al Qa'ida associated groups’.Footnote 29 The guidance goes on to state that

Islamist extremists regard Western intervention in Muslim-majority countries as a ‘war with Islam’, creating a narrative of ‘them’ and ‘us’. Their ideology includes the uncompromising belief that people cannot be both Muslim and British, and that Muslims living here should not participate in our democracy’. Islamist extremists specifically attack the principles of civic participation and social cohesion. These extremists purport to identify grievances to which terrorist organisations then claim to have a solution.Footnote 30

CONTEST, too, argues that ‘the threat from Islamist terrorism remains the foremost and most significant’, namely, ‘acts of terrorism perpetrated or inspired by politico-religiously motivated groups or individuals who support and use violence as a means to establish their interpretation of an Islamic society’.Footnote 31

The 2015 Act requires each local authority to have a panel in place to assess ‘the extent to which identified individuals are vulnerable to being drawn into terrorism’. A chief officer of police may refer a person to the panel ‘only if there are reasonable grounds to believe that the individual is vulnerable to being drawn into terrorism’. The panel must prepare a plan for such persons if it considers they should be offered support to reduce this vulnerability. Once the necessary consent is given in relation to those persons, the panel must arrange to support them in accordance with the plan, which the panel is to keep under review and to revise or withdraw, as appropriate. The panel is to make further assessments of an individual's vulnerability where either the necessary consent is refused or withdrawn to the giving of support under a plan, or the panel has determined that support under a plan should be withdrawn, and prepare a further support plan if appropriate. A support plan must include: how, when and by whom a request for the necessary consent is to be made; the nature of the support; the persons to provide it; and how and when support is provided. Where a panel determines that support should not be given, the panel must consider whether to refer the individual to a provider of any health or social care services and make such arrangements for the referral. In exercising these functions a panel must have regard to any guidance given by the secretary of state.Footnote 32

These so-called Channel panels also impact on religion.Footnote 33 In 2020, referrals increased and 30 per cent of them were for Islamist extremism.Footnote 34 However, as of March 2020, only 11 per cent of those referred were deemed at risk of radicalisation following assessment by a panel. One possible interpretation is that those vulnerable to radicalisation are either not being identified and referred or else they are withdrawing from the voluntary (or consensual) support plan.Footnote 35

An important religious aspect of the regulatory regime is the impact that the Prevent Duty may have on the work of university chaplains. The 2015 Act lists ‘Relevant Higher Education Bodies (RHEBs)’ as specified authorities which must have ‘due regard to the need to prevent people from being drawn into terrorism’.Footnote 36 The Prevent Duty provides that all RHEBs should provide ‘sufficient chaplaincy and pastoral support available to all students’. It is expected, for instance, that RHEBs have ‘clear and widely available policies for the use of prayer rooms and other faith-related activities’. Such policies ‘should outline arrangements for managing prayer and faith facilities … and for dealing with any issues arising from the use of the facilities’.Footnote 37 In Wales, for instance, at the University of South Wales, ‘The Chaplaincy will offer support to the individual through the referral process and the Channel programme and liaise with other support services to coordinate a holistic support network for the student.’ Moreover, ‘Chaplaincy will offer a comfortable and safe environment within which students and apprentices going through the Channel programme may be supported.’Footnote 38

The government also operates a Desistance and Disengagement Programme which seeks to rehabilitate persons subject to ‘court approved conditions’, including ‘all terrorism and terrorism-related offenders on probation licence … those on Terrorism Prevention and Investigation Measures (TPIMs) and those who have returned from contact zones in Syria or Iraq and are subject to Temporary Exclusion Orders (TEO)’; non-compliance ‘could lead to the possibility of being charged for breach of conditions or being recalled to prison’.Footnote 39 The programme may involve a process of ‘deradicalisation’, which is described in the Prevent Strategy as an ‘activity aimed at a person who supports terrorism and in some cases has engaged in terrorist related activity, which is intended to effect cognitive and/or behavioural change leading to a new outlook on terrorism and disengagement from it’.Footnote 40 The programme has been criticised recently on the basis that some on it have since engaged in terrorism.Footnote 41

There are also rules in the Act regarding freedom of speech and compliance with the Prevent Duty.Footnote 42 For example, the Higher Education Prevent Duty Guidance states that RHEBs ‘need’ to ‘balance’ the ‘legal duties in terms of both ensuring freedom of speech and academic freedom [while] also protecting student and staff welfare’. As ‘encouragement of terrorism and inviting support for a proscribed terrorist organisation are both criminal offences’, RHEBs are expected not to ‘provide a platform for these offences to be committed’.Footnote 43 Therefore, under paragraph 11 of the guidance,

when deciding whether or not to host a particular speaker, RHEBs should consider carefully whether the views being expressed, or likely to be expressed, constitute extremist views that risk drawing people into terrorism or are shared by terrorist groups. In these circumstances the event should not be allowed to proceed except where RHEBs are entirely convinced that such risk can be fully mitigated without cancellation of the event. This includes ensuring that, where any event is being allowed to proceed, speakers with extremist views that could draw people into terrorism are challenged with opposing views as part of that same event, rather than in a separate forum. Where RHEBs are in any doubt that the risk cannot be fully mitigated they should exercise caution and not allow the event to proceed.Footnote 44

In 2019, the Court of Appeal ruled paragraph 11 unlawful because of its ‘unconditional phrasing’ and its failure ‘to inform RHEBs of those competing obligations, which include the duty to ensure freedom of speech’.Footnote 45 In turn, universities have their own Prevent Duty norms, on the basis that, typically: ‘The University recognises the risk that members … may be targets for radicalisation and we will take appropriate measures to minimise this risk, working in partnership with relevant agencies through appropriate measures, such as [the] Channel [programme]’ and ‘Where a specific risk is identified the University Prevent Group will assess that risk and advise on action accordingly.’Footnote 46

EVALUATIONS OF THE PREVENT DUTY AS IT APPLIES TO RELIGION

In 2011, the Prevent Strategy was considered by the Home Secretary as ‘absolutely fundamental to tackling terrorism in the UK’. By the end of its first year, the Prevent Duty had helped to prevent 150 people, including 50 children, from entering ISIS-controlled areas in Iraq and Syria.Footnote 47 However, the Prevent Duty, as it deals with religion, has also been the subject of numerous criticisms. They may be categorised as follows.

First, the Prevent Duty has been criticised on the basis of arguments from the perspective of fairness and human rights. For instance, the duty is ‘not only unjust but also unproductive’; it has an ‘overly broad definition of extremism’ (see above); it ‘creates a systematic risk of violations of the right to freedom of expression, the right against discrimination and the right to privacy’; and it should be replaced by a more liberal approach – for example: ‘Doctors fear that their obligation to report patients to the authorities is in conflict with their duty of confidentiality and will undermine the doctor–patient relationship’.Footnote 48 According to the Justice Initiative report, ‘the current Prevent strategy suffers from multiple, mutually reinforcing structural flaws, the foreseeable consequence [of] which is a serious risk of human rights violations’. These flaws include what is claimed as the unfair ‘targeting of “pre-criminality”, “non-violent extremism”, and opposition to “British values”’. Moreover, it is said that

Prevent's targeting of non-violent extremism and ‘indicators’ of risk of being drawn into terrorism lack a scientific basis … the belief that non-violent extremism – including ‘radical’ or religious ideology – is the precursor to terrorism has been widely discredited by the British government itself.Footnote 49

Second, there are difficulties inherent in identifying the causes and nature of radicalisation. For instance, the case of Tower Hamlets v B involved a 16-year-old girl, B, who was prevented from trying to travel to Syria and who, with her parents, had been arrested but not charged on suspicion of preparation of acts of terrorism. Terrorist material was found in her family home, including ‘sinister polemics designed to rally “good Muslims” to the cause of jihad’.Footnote 50 Her siblings had been through a Prevent programme, and as a result she was removed from the home by the court. However, a foster placement not having been found for her, following assessment, B returned to her family home. The observations of Hayden J are worth presenting in extenso:

There is no correlation between strict or very high levels of commitment to a rigorous interpretation of Islam and a susceptibility to radicalised beliefs. The children of highly devout Muslims are neither more nor less likely to be attracted to Isis ideology. In so far as that may be a popular perception, it is entirely misconceived. It runs counter to the research … and contrary to my own experience in these cases. In Re A v London Borough Enfield … A appeared to have been attracted to extremist ideology, in part, by way of rebellion to her highly anxious parents whom she considered to be insufficiently Islamic in their lifestyle. All this illustrates the complexity of the challenge to the Police, the Social Services and the Courts in understanding the process of radicalisation. Every child is different, every radicalised child is different.Footnote 51

The Prevent Duty has therefore been criticised as inadequately dealing with radicalisation by failing to recognise that the precise nature and causes of radicalisation are unknown.

Third, as set out in a briefing paper to the Labour Party by the Muslim Council of Britain, the Prevent Duty has been criticised as unduly targeting the Muslim community.Footnote 52 For this reason some claim that the Prevent Duty fosters religious discrimination, or at least raises concerns about discrimination against Muslims.Footnote 53 There has also been debate about the impact of Prevent on Muslims at universities. Two recent studies suggest that Muslim students (and university staff) ‘tend to self-censor their discussions to avoid becoming the object of suspicion and are sometimes discouraged from exploring, researching, or teaching about Islam, especially when linked to terrorism, fundamentalism, or military conflict’. So ‘Prevent has the doubly damaging effect of sustaining negative stereotypes and disabling the mechanisms universities have for subjecting such stereotypes to critical scrutiny.’Footnote 54

Fourth, not all radical religious beliefs and their manifestation in radical action are covered by the Prevent Duty, which fails to distinguish clearly between permissible radical religion and impermissible harmful religion. Needless to say, the aim of the Prevent Duty is to address radicalising which is carried out with the purpose of drawing people into terrorism. It does not apply to religious radicalising which does not have this purpose. That is, inculcating radical religious beliefs and promoting radical religious practice are not of themselves forbidden by the Prevent Duty. There is some support for this view from Strasbourg: radical religion is protected by Article 9(1) ECHR unless its exercise is limited by Article 9(2) – namely, on grounds of public safety, public order, health or morals, or the rights and freedoms of others. For the European Court of Human Rights, ‘freedom to manifest one's religion comprises, in principle, the right to attempt to convince and convert other people’. Moreover, ‘it is a known fact that a religious way of life requires of its followers both abidance by religious rules and self-dedication to religious work’ which can ‘sometimes assume such extreme forms as monasticism’. Such manifestation is ‘fully covered by the safeguards of Article 9’ providing that ‘the adoption of such a way of life is the result of a free and independent decision by an adult’ and is not ‘incompatible with the rules of democracy’.Footnote 55 In other words, a distinction must be made between legitimate radical religion (which does not draw people into terrorism) and harmful radical religion (which does). Lady Hale sums up, commenting on the Tower Hamlets case: ‘if “radicalising” means no more than a set of Muslim beliefs and practices is being strongly instilled in these children, that cannot be regarded as in any way objectionable or inappropriate’.Footnote 56

Fifth, deradicalisation programmes may be problematic on two counts. For Strasbourg, the state must not indoctrinate its citizens by way of religious education.Footnote 57 First, if the process of deradicalisation is considered a form of religious education, it may be seen as a form of indoctrination, and forcing an individual to change their belief violates their absolute right under Article 9(1) ECHR. Second, although deradicalisation programmes such as Channel require consent, others, such as the Desistance and Disengagement Programme, are compulsory ‘where mandated for individuals subject to TEOs, TPIMs or probation requirements’. In such circumstances, ‘non-compliance could lead to the possibility of being charged for breach of conditions or being recalled to prison’.Footnote 58 In practice, it is unclear whether an individual can decline to give consent to a deradicalisation programme. This is concerning because 95 per cent of deradicalisation programmes have been deemed ineffective.Footnote 59

The effect of counter-terrorism measures on religious freedom was commented upon by the Government in October 2015 in relation to plans to update the counter-extremism strategy.Footnote 60 It was announced that the Department for Communities and Local Government would be ‘commissioning a new programme of support to help faith institutions to establish strong governance’; in particular, ‘The programme aims to strengthen and support places of worship of all faiths in order to improve governance, increase their capacity to engage with women and young people, challenge intolerance and develop resilience to extremism.’Footnote 61 It was also proposed to institute a ‘partnership with faith groups to review the training provided to those who work as faith leaders in public institutions’.Footnote 62 This vital collaborative work is ongoing.

CONCLUSION

In spite of the lack of explicit and systematic reference to religion in the Counter-Terrorism and Extremism Act 2015, religion is at the centre of the Prevent Duty as it is treated in Government guidance on this subject. Any study of Prevent must therefore give a prominent place to religion. The statutory Prevent Duty, and the complex soft law which seeks to implement it, are very worthy of study from within the law and religion community. The Prevent Duty has much to say about religion – as a force for good and as a force for bad. The earlier assumption that the Muslim community was more vulnerable to extremism has been superseded by a more balanced approach which recognises its contribution to social cohesion and the applicability of the Prevent Duty to all faith groups.

But there are five criticisms that may be made. First, ‘religious causes’ form an integral part of the statutory definition of terrorism. Second, the formulation of the Prevent Duty was stimulated in part by religion, namely, Islamist extremism and radicalisation drawing people into terrorism. Therefore, religion plays a part in the understanding of extremism and radicalisation, as faith groups have a part in combating these through dialogue with Government. Third, the Prevent Duty is imposed on specified authorities in the public sphere; these include faith schools but not places of worship (though some religious organisations have their own prevent strategies). Fourth, the Channel panels deal with radicalisation and the Prevent Duty has a direct impact on the work of, for example, university chaplaincy. Fifth, the Prevent Duty may be criticised for several reasons. Its precise impact on human rights has not been systematically thought through. It is perceived to target Muslims and as such may be considered discriminatory. It is difficult to determine precisely the nature and causes of radicalisation. It fails to distinguish clearly between permissible radical religion and impermissible harmful religion. Finally, there are questions over whether deradicalisation programmes (which do not have a wholly successful track record) are consistent with the absolute right under Article 9 ECHR to hold any religious belief.

Footnotes

1

I am grateful to Mark Hill QC, Roxanna Fatemi-Dehaghani and Norman Doe for their comments on an earlier draft of this article.

References

2 E Pickles, ‘Recognising the role of faith in Britain’, 26 February 2015, available at <https://www.gov.uk/government/speeches/recognising-the-role-of-faith-in-britain>, accessed 20 February 2021.

3 Gallagher (Valuation Officer) v Church of Jesus Christ Of Latter-Day Saints [2008] UKHL 56 at para 51.

4 Terrorism Act 2000, s 1(1), emphasis added. While this article is on religion, the Prevent Duty covers other types of extremism: see note 27 below.

5 Yet, the Prevent Duty is not treated in most standard law and religion texts. On the connection between religion, law and terrorism more widely, see, eg, Idriss, M, ‘Religion and the Anti-Terrorism Crime and Security Act 2001’, (2002) Crim LR 890891Google Scholar; Ahdar, R (ed), Research Handbook on Law and Religion (Cheltenham, 2018), pp 351354CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Bottoni, R and Ferrari, S (eds), Routledge Handbook of Religious Laws (Abingdon, 2019)CrossRefGoogle Scholar, pp 184, 190, 330, 332. See also Kiviorg, M (ed), Securitisation of Religious Freedom: religion and limits of state control (Granada, 2020)Google Scholar.

6 HM Government, ‘Prevent Strategy’, June 2011, p 1. For this and the other Prevent Strategy and Prevent Duty documents cited in this article, see <https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/prevent-duty-guidance>, accessed 20 January 2021.

7 HM Government, ‘CONTEST: The United Kingdom's Strategy for Countering Terrorism’, July 2011, p 6; HM Government, ‘Prevent Strategy’, pp 7–8.

8 HM Government, ‘Prevent Strategy’, p 108.

9 Ibid: ‘The single narrative is also sometimes known as the Al Qa'ida Narrative, the Grand Narrative or the Global Extremist Narrative.’ Other definitions given in the strategy document include ‘Islamism’.

10 Ibid, pp 5, 8, 80, 107 and 108. See p 35 for ‘core values’: ‘democracy, rule of law, equality of opportunity, freedom of speech and the rights of all men and women to live free from persecution of any kind’.

11 Ibid, p 7.

12 HM Government, ‘Report to the Home Secretary of independent oversight of Prevent review and strategy’ (2011), para 8.

13 Ibid, para 54: ‘Islamic faith groups range far more widely than mosques: there is evidence that many young people who are radicalised regard the mosques attended by their parents as not relevant to their radical ideas, which they may share and develop in groups outside the mosque.’

14 HC Deb 7 January 2015, vol 590.

15 Counter-Terrorism and Security Act 2015, s 26.

16 Counter-Terrorism and Security Act 2015, s 27(2)(f).

17 For faith schools in England, see M Hill, R Sandberg, N Doe and C Grout, Religion and Law in the United Kingdom (third edition, Alphen aan den Rijn, 2021) paras 468–490.

18 HL Deb 28 January 2015, vol 759, cols 258 and 291.

19 Cited in N Doe, Comparative Religious Law: Judaism, Christianity, Islam (Cambridge, 2018), p 308.

20 Cited in ibid, p 217.

21 J Espinoza, ‘Ofsted warning over thousands of children in danger of radicalisation’, The Telegraph, 16 May 2016.

22 Counter-Terrorism and Security Act 2015, s 29.

23 HM Government, ‘Revised Prevent Duty guidance for England and Wales’ (updated 10 April 2019), paras 1–4: counter-terrorism is the responsibility of the UK Government, but ‘many of the local delivery mechanisms in Wales and Scotland, such as health, education and local government, are devolved’; ‘close cooperation’ is required. There is separate guidance for Scotland.

24 Ibid, paras 14–146.

25 London Borough of Tower Hamlets v B [2016] EWHC 1707 (Fam).

26 Ibid, paras 9 and 24.

27 Ibid, para 150, presenting the report A Silke and K Brown, ‘Issues relating to radicalisation’, 6 November 2015.

28 HM Government, ‘Revised Prevent Duty guidance for England and Wales’, para 7.

29 Ibid, para 9: ‘But terrorists associated with the extreme right also pose a continued threat.’

30 Ibid, para 10; see also para 11 on ‘white supremacist ideology’ and ‘right-wing’ terrorism, which is not categorised as religious terror.

31 HM Government, ‘CONTEST’, p 8, n 4.

32 Counter-Terrorism and Extremism Act 2015, ss 36–37: panel membership and proceedings; s 38: co-operation with partners. See also HM Government, ‘Channel Duty Guidance: protecting people vulnerable to being drawn into terrorism’ (2020), p 10.

33 Home Office, ‘Individuals referred to and supported through the Prevent programme, England and Wales, April 2018 to March 2019’, p 14.

34 J Grierson and D Sabbagh, ‘Largest number of Prevent referrals relating to far-right extremism’, The Guardian, 26 November 2020.

35 Commission for Countering Extremism, ‘COVID-19: how hateful extremists are exploiting the pandemic’, July 2020.

36 That is, their governing body or proprietor. Counter-Terrorism and Extremism Act 2015, s 26(1).

37 Home Office, ‘Prevent Duty guidance: for higher education institutions in England and Wales’ (updated 10 April 2019), paras 25 and 26.

38 University of South Wales, ‘Prevent Protocol’, June 2019. See also HEFCW, ‘Prevent Duty: framework for monitoring higher education in Wales – 2019/20 onwards’, 1 August 2019, para 1, <https://www.southwales.ac.uk/degree-apprenticeships/policies-and-procedures/>, accessed 2 June 2021.

39 HM Government, ‘CONTEST’, p 40.

40 HM Government, ‘Prevent Strategy’, p 107.

41 B Bostock, ‘24 people have been killed by terrorists who went through government “deradicalization” programs, showing why these efforts are crucially flawed’, Business Insider, 7 December 2019.

42 Counter-Terrorism and Extremism Act 2015, s 32.

43 Home Office, ‘Prevent Duty guidance: for higher education institutions in England and Wales’, paras 8, 10.

44 Ibid, para 11.

45 Butt v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2019] EWCA Civ 256 at para 177.

46 Cardiff University, ‘Prevent Policy’, n.d., p 2, <https://www.cardiff.ac.uk/__data/assets/pdf_file/0004/1079635/CARDIFF-UNIVERSITY-PREVENT-POLICY.pdf>, accessed 2 June 2021.

47 Secretary of State for the Home Office, ‘Counter-terrorism: written question – 51248’, 31 October 2016.

48 A Singh, ‘Instead of fighting terror, Prevent is creating a climate of fear’, The Guardian, 19 October 2016. Singh's article does not give a religious example; however, there will certainly be analogous issues in the sphere of religion: for example, surrounding the seal of confession in Roman Catholicism and Anglicism. See R Bursell, ‘The seal of the confessional’, (1990) 2 Ecc LJ 84–109; see also C Grout, ‘The seal of the confessional and the criminal law of England and Wales’, (2020) 22 Ecc LJ 138–155. However, these deal with safeguarding and not the Prevent Duty.

49 Open Society Justice Initiative, ‘Eroding trust: the UK's Prevent counter-extremism strategy in health and education’, October 2016, <https://www.justiceinitiative.org/publications/eroding-trust-uk-s-prevent-counter-extremism-strategy-health-and-education>, accessed 2 June 2021.

50 London Borough of Tower Hamlets v B, para 6.

51 Ibid, para 126. The case cited is Re A v London Borough Enfield [2016] EWHC 567 (Admin). Research presented by expert witnesses included M King and D Taylor, ‘The radicalization of homegrown jihadists: a review of theoretical models and social psychological evidence’, (2011) 23 Terrorism and Political Violence 602–622.

52 F Qurashi, ‘The Prevent strategy and the UK “war on terror”: embedding infrastructures of surveillance in Muslim communities’, (2018) 4 Palgrave Communications, <https://www.nature.com/articles/s41599-017-0061-9>, accessed 4 January 2021.

53 D Barrett, ‘Tackling radicalisation: the limitations of the anti-radicalisation prevent duty’, (2018) 12 European Human Rights Law Review 530–541 at 536; L Blackwood, N Hopkins and S Reicher, ‘From theorizing radicalization to surveillance practices: Muslims in the cross hairs of scrutiny’, (2015) 37 Political Psychology 597–612. Muslim Council of Britain, ‘Meeting between David Anderson QC and the MCB: concerns on Prevent’, 2015, <https://www.mcb.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/20150803-Case-studies-about-Prevent.pdf>; Muslim Council of Britain, ‘The impact of Prevent on Muslim communities’, 2016, <http://archive.mcb.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/MCB-CT-Briefing2.pdf>, both accessed 2 June 2021.

54 Guest, M et al. , Islam and Muslims on UK University Campuses: perceptions and challenges (Durham, 2020), p 6Google Scholar, emphasis in original.

55 European Court of Human Rights, ‘Guide on Article 9 of the European Convention on Human Rights: freedom of thought, conscience and religion’ (updated 31 August 2020) pp 3, 42, 43–44, 54, 83, emphasis added.

56 Hale, Lady, ‘Freedom of religion and freedom from religion’, (2017) 19 Ecc LJ 313Google Scholar at 9.

57 Papageorgiou and Others v Greece App nos 4762/18 and 6140/18 (ECtHR, 31 October 2019).

58 Home Office News Team, ‘Fact sheet: Desistance and Disengagement Programme’, 5 November 2019, <https://homeofficemedia.blog.gov.uk/2019/11/05/fact-sheet-desistance-and-disengagement-programme/>, accessed 2 June 2021.

59 C Brader, ‘Extremism in prisons: are UK deradicalization programmes working?’, 11 June 2020, House of Lords Library, <https://lordslibrary.parliament.uk/extremism-in-prisons-are-uk-deradicalisation-programmes-working/> accessed 2 June 2021.

60 Home Office, ‘Counter-Extremism strategy’, October 2015.

61 HM Government, ‘Prevent Strategy’, p 108: ‘Resilience in the context of this document means the capability of people, groups and communities to rebut and reject proponents of terrorism and the ideology they promote.’

62 Cranmer, F, ‘Parliamentary report’, (2016) 18 Ecc LJ 222229Google Scholar at 223–224.