The French government is looking to make the emergency anti-terror laws that were created following last month's attack a permanent part of the country's constitution, AFP reports.
The laws increase the tools for authorities, including allowing raids and house arrests without a judge's authorization.
"The threat has never been higher," says Prime Minister Manuel Valls. "We must face up to a war, a war against terrorism, against jihadism, against radical Islam."
Critics, though, have expressed concern over what they see as encroaching on individuals' rights.