Being watched : legal challenges to government surveillance / Jeffrey L. Vagle.
2017
KF5399 .V44 2017 (Map It)
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Details
Author
Title
Being watched : legal challenges to government surveillance / Jeffrey L. Vagle.
Published
New York : New York University Press, [2017]
Copyright
©2017
Call Number
KF5399 .V44 2017
ISBN
9781479809271 (cloth ; alkaline paper)
1479809276 (cloth ; alkaline paper)
1479809276 (cloth ; alkaline paper)
Description
v, 165 pages ; 24 cm
System Control No.
(OCoLC)975286087
Summary
A history of the Supreme Court decision that set the legal precedent for citizen challenges to government surveillance. The tension between national security and civil rights is nowhere more evident than in the fight over government domestic surveillance. Governments must be able to collect information at some level, but surveillance has become increasingly controversial due to its more egregious uses and abuses, which tips the balance toward increased (and sometimes total) government control. This struggle came to forefront in the early 1970s, after decades of abuses by U.S. law enforcement and intelligence agencies were revealed to the public, prompting both legislation and lawsuits challenging the constitutionality of these programs. As the plaintiffs in these lawsuits discovered, however, bringing legal challenges to secret government surveillance programs in federal courts faces a formidable obstacle in the principle that limits court access only to those who have standing, meaning they can show actual or imminent injury: a significant problem when evidence of the challenged program is secret. In Being Watched, Jeffrey L. Vagle draws on the legacy of the 1972 Supreme Court decision in Laird v. Tatum to tell the fascinating and disturbing story of jurisprudence related to the issue of standing in citizen challenges to government surveillance in the United States. It examines the facts of surveillance cases and the reasoning of the courts who heard them, and considers whether the obstacle of standing to surveillance challenges in U.S. courts can ever be overcome.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 153-159) and index.
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
1.
You Are Being Watched
1
2.
History of Government Surveillance
17
3.
Getting through the Courthouse Door
35
4.
Doctrine of Article III Standing
51
5.
Before the Supreme Court
70
6.
Government Surveillance and the Law
89
7.
Legacy of Laird v. Tatum
108
8.
Technology, National Security, and Surveillance
125
9.
Future of Citizen Challenges to Government Surveillance
144
Notes
153
Index
161
About the Author
165