...there is plenty here to both introduce scholars to current critical debates and problems, and at the same time to suggest important points of departure for further research.
- Bernard Keenan, Department of Law, London School of Economics and Political Science, International Journal of Law and Information Technology
In this book, issues of privacy and surveillance are explored from a domestic, comparative and transatlantic perspective as well as from the perspective of private corporations, non-governmental organizations and oversight authorities. Thus, it gives a comprehensive overview about current transatlantic challenges and the perspectives involved.
- S-I Ghotra, European Review of Public Law
Recent revelations, by Edward Snowden and others, of the vast network of government spying enabled by modern technology have raised major concerns both in the European Union and the United States on how to protect privacy in the face of increasing governmental surveillance.
This book brings together some of the leading experts in the fields of constitutional law, criminal law and human rights from the US and the EU to examine the protection of privacy in the digital era, as well as the challenges that counter-terrorism cooperation between governments pose to human rights. It examines the state of privacy protections on both sides of the Atlantic, the best mechanisms for preserving privacy, and whether the EU and the US should develop joint transnational mechanisms to protect privacy on a reciprocal basis.
As technology enables governments to know more and more about their citizens, and about the citizens of other nations, this volume offers critical perspectives on how best to respond to one of the most challenging developments of the twenty-first century.
A cutting-edge body of scholarship on the most pressing and controversial issues of our time.
This series pioneers the study of security and justice, whose controversial relationship has taken on particular urgency since the ‘war on terror’, and related phenomena such as targeted killing, preventive pre-trial detention and mass surveillance. It seeks to include all legal methods and approaches, cutting across traditional subjects such as constitutional and public law, human rights law, terrorism law, legal and political theory, international law and political science.
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
David D Cole is Hon George J Mitchell Professor in Law and Public Policy at Georgetown University Law Center, and National Legal Director of the American Civil Liberties Union. He writes regularly for The Nation, the New York Review of Books, and many other publications.
Federico Fabbrini is Full Professor of Law at the School of Law & Government of Dublin City University. He holds a PhD in European Law from the European University Institute.
Stephen Schulhofer is Robert B McKay Professor of Law at New York University Law School. He is the author of More Essential Than Ever: The Fourth Amendment in the Twenty-first Century.