Surveillance presents a conundrum: how to ensure safety, stability, and efficiency while respecting privacy and individual liberty. From police officers to corporations to intelligence agencies, surveillance law is tasked with striking this difficult and delicate balance. That challenge is compounded by ever-changing technologies and evolving social norms. Following the revelations of Edward Snowden and a host of private-sector controversies, there is intense interest among policymakers, business leaders, attorneys, academics, students, and the public regarding legal, technological, and policy issues relating to surveillance. This Handbook documents and organizes these conversations, bringing together some of the most thoughtful and impactful contributors to contemporary surveillance debates, policies, and practices. Its pages explore surveillance techniques and technologies; their value for law enforcement, national security, and private enterprise; their impacts on citizens and communities; and the many ways societies do - and should - regulate surveillance.
Author(s): David Gray, Stephen E. Henderson
Series: Cambridge Law Handbooks
Edition: 1
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Year: 2017
Language: English
Commentary: TruePDF / Cover / TOC
Pages: 787
Tags: Electronic Surveillance: Law And Legislation: United States, Intelligence Service: Law And Legislation: United States, Terrorism: Prevention: Law And Legislation: United States, National Security: Law And Legislation: United States, Computer Security: Law And Legislation: United States, Computer Networks: Security Measures: United States, Cyberterrorism: Prevention: United States, Privacy And Civil Liberties Oversight Board, Privacy: Right Of: Government policy: United States
Cover
The Cambridge Handbook of Surveillance Law
The Cambridge Handbook of Surveillance Law - Title page
Copyright page
Dedication
Contents
Notes on the Contributors
Introduction
Part I - Surveillance Techniques and Technologies
1 - NSA Surveillance in the War on Terror
2 - Location Tracking
3 - Terrorist Watchlists
4 - “Incidental” Foreign Intelligence Surveillance and the Fourth Amendment
5 - Biometric Surveillance and Big Data Governance
6 - Fusion Centers
7 - Big Data Surveillance: The Convergence of Big Data and Law Enforcement
8 - The Internet of Things and Self-Surveillance Systems
Part II - Surveillance Applications
9 - Balancing Privacy and Public Safety in the Post-Snowden Era
10 - Obama’s Mixed Legacy on Cybersecurity, Surveillance, and Surveillance Reform
11 - Local Law Enforcement Video Surveillance: Rules, Technology, and Legal Implications
12 - The Surveillance Implications of Efforts to Combat Cyber Harassment
13 - The Case for Surveillance
14 - “Going Dark”: Encryption, Privacy, Liberty, and Security in the “Golden Age of Surveillance”
15 - Business Responses to Surveillance
Part III - Impacts of Surveillance
16 - Seeing, Seizing, and Searching Like a State: Constitutional Developments from the Seventeenth Century to the End of the Nineteenth Century
17 - An Eerie Feeling of Déjà Vu: From Soviet Snitches to Angry Birds
18 - The Impact of Online Surveillance on Behavior
19 - Surveillance versus Privacy: Effects and Implications
20 - Intellectual and Social Freedom
21 - The Surveillance Regulation Toolkit: Thinking beyond Probable Cause
22 - European Human Rights, Criminal Surveillance, and Intelligence Surveillance: Towards “Good Enough” Oversight, Preferably but Not Necessarily by Judges
23 - Lessons from the History of National Security Surveillance
Part IV - Regulation of Surveillance
24 - Regulating Surveillance through Litigation: Some Thoughts from the Trenches
25 - Legislative Regulation of Government Surveillance
26 - California’s Electronic Communications Privacy Act (CalECPA): A Case Study in Legislative Regulation of Surveillance
27 - Surveillance in the European Union
28 - Mutual Legal Assistance in the Digital Age
29 - The Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board
30 - FTC Regulation of Cybersecurity and Surveillance
31 - The Federal Communications Commission as Privacy Regulator
Index