Privacy and Power
Herausgeber: Miller, Russell A.
Privacy and Power
Herausgeber: Miller, Russell A.
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This book documents and explains the differences in the ways Americans and Europeans approach the issues of privacy and intelligence gathering.
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This book documents and explains the differences in the ways Americans and Europeans approach the issues of privacy and intelligence gathering.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 812
- Erscheinungstermin: 2. Februar 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 48mm
- Gewicht: 1304g
- ISBN-13: 9781107154049
- ISBN-10: 1107154049
- Artikelnr.: 46489361
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 812
- Erscheinungstermin: 2. Februar 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 48mm
- Gewicht: 1304g
- ISBN-13: 9781107154049
- ISBN-10: 1107154049
- Artikelnr.: 46489361
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
Introduction; Privacy and power: a transatlantic dialogue in the shadow of
the NSA-Affair Russell A. Miller; Part I. Privacy and Data-Protection for
the Digital Age: 1. Foucault's panopticon - a model for NSA surveillance?
Sarah Horowitz; 2. A rose by any other name? The comparative law of the
NSA-Affair Russell A. Miller; 3. Privacy as a public good Joshua Fairfield
and Christoph Engel; 4. The right to data protection: a no right thesis
Ralf Poscher; Part II. Framing the Transatlantic Debate: 5. Privacy,
Rechtsstaatlichkeit, and the legal limits on extraterritorial surveillance
Anne Peters; 6. Privacy, hypocrisy, and a defense of surveillance Benjamin
Wittes; Part III. Transatlantic Perspectives on the NSA-Affair; Section 1.
American Voices: 7. Sensing disturbances in the Force: unofficial
reflections on developments and challenges in the US-Germany security
relationship Ronald Lee; 8. Metadeath: how does metadata surveillance
inform lethal consequences? Margaret Hu; 9. 'We're in this together' -
reframing EU responses to criminal unauthorized disclosures of US
intelligence activities Andrew Borene; 10. Fourth Amendment rights for
nonresident aliens Alec Walen; 11. Forget about it? Harmonizing European
and American protections for privacy, free speech, and due process Dawn
Nunziato; Section 2. European Voices: 12. The challenge of limiting
intelligence agencies' mass surveillance regimes: why Western democracies
cannot give up on communication privacy Konstantin von Notz; 13. German
exceptionalism? The debate about the German foreign intelligence service
(BND) Stefan Heumann; 14. The NSU case - structural reform of intelligence
agencies' involvement in criminal investigations? Marc Engelhart; 15. Legal
restraints on the extraterritorial activities of Germany's intelligence
services Klaus Gärditz; 16. Assessing the CJEU's 'Google decision' - a
tentative first approach Johannes Masing; Part IV. Transnational Legal
Responses to Privacy and Intelligence Gathering; Section 1. International
Law: 17. Towards multilateral standards for foreign surveillance reform Ian
Brown, Morton H. Halperin, Ben Hayes, Ben Scott and Mathias Vermeulen; 18.
Espionage, security interests, and human rights in the second machine age:
NSA mass surveillance and the framework of public international law Silja
Voeneky; 19. The need for an institutionalized and transparent set of
domestic legal rules governing transnational intelligence sharing in
democratic societies Susana Sanchez Ferro; Section 2. European Law: 20.
Developments in European data protection law in the shadow of the
NSA-Affair Jens-Peter Scheider; 21. Why blanket surveillance is no security
blanket: data retention in the UK after the European Data Retention
Directive Lucia Zedner; 22. Do androids forget European sheep? - the CJEU's
concept of a 'right to be forgotten' and the German perspective Bernd
Holznagel and Sarah Hartmann; 23. Adequate transatlantic data exchange in
the shadow of the NSA-Affair Els De Busser; Part V. Transatlantic
Reflections on the Cultural Meaning of Privacy and Intelligence Gathering:
24. The intimacy of Stasi surveillance, the NSA-Affair, and contemporary
German cinema Laura Heins; 25. Hans Fallada, the Nazis, and the defense of
privacy Roger Crockett; 26. 'It runs its secret course in public' -
watching the mass ornament with Dr Mabuse Summer Renault-Steele; 27.
Secrecy, surveillance, spy fiction: myth-making and the misunderstanding of
trust in the transatlantic intelligence relationship Eva Jobs; 28.
CITIZENME: what Laura Poitras got wrong about the NSA-Affair Russell Miller
and Stephen Chovanec.
the NSA-Affair Russell A. Miller; Part I. Privacy and Data-Protection for
the Digital Age: 1. Foucault's panopticon - a model for NSA surveillance?
Sarah Horowitz; 2. A rose by any other name? The comparative law of the
NSA-Affair Russell A. Miller; 3. Privacy as a public good Joshua Fairfield
and Christoph Engel; 4. The right to data protection: a no right thesis
Ralf Poscher; Part II. Framing the Transatlantic Debate: 5. Privacy,
Rechtsstaatlichkeit, and the legal limits on extraterritorial surveillance
Anne Peters; 6. Privacy, hypocrisy, and a defense of surveillance Benjamin
Wittes; Part III. Transatlantic Perspectives on the NSA-Affair; Section 1.
American Voices: 7. Sensing disturbances in the Force: unofficial
reflections on developments and challenges in the US-Germany security
relationship Ronald Lee; 8. Metadeath: how does metadata surveillance
inform lethal consequences? Margaret Hu; 9. 'We're in this together' -
reframing EU responses to criminal unauthorized disclosures of US
intelligence activities Andrew Borene; 10. Fourth Amendment rights for
nonresident aliens Alec Walen; 11. Forget about it? Harmonizing European
and American protections for privacy, free speech, and due process Dawn
Nunziato; Section 2. European Voices: 12. The challenge of limiting
intelligence agencies' mass surveillance regimes: why Western democracies
cannot give up on communication privacy Konstantin von Notz; 13. German
exceptionalism? The debate about the German foreign intelligence service
(BND) Stefan Heumann; 14. The NSU case - structural reform of intelligence
agencies' involvement in criminal investigations? Marc Engelhart; 15. Legal
restraints on the extraterritorial activities of Germany's intelligence
services Klaus Gärditz; 16. Assessing the CJEU's 'Google decision' - a
tentative first approach Johannes Masing; Part IV. Transnational Legal
Responses to Privacy and Intelligence Gathering; Section 1. International
Law: 17. Towards multilateral standards for foreign surveillance reform Ian
Brown, Morton H. Halperin, Ben Hayes, Ben Scott and Mathias Vermeulen; 18.
Espionage, security interests, and human rights in the second machine age:
NSA mass surveillance and the framework of public international law Silja
Voeneky; 19. The need for an institutionalized and transparent set of
domestic legal rules governing transnational intelligence sharing in
democratic societies Susana Sanchez Ferro; Section 2. European Law: 20.
Developments in European data protection law in the shadow of the
NSA-Affair Jens-Peter Scheider; 21. Why blanket surveillance is no security
blanket: data retention in the UK after the European Data Retention
Directive Lucia Zedner; 22. Do androids forget European sheep? - the CJEU's
concept of a 'right to be forgotten' and the German perspective Bernd
Holznagel and Sarah Hartmann; 23. Adequate transatlantic data exchange in
the shadow of the NSA-Affair Els De Busser; Part V. Transatlantic
Reflections on the Cultural Meaning of Privacy and Intelligence Gathering:
24. The intimacy of Stasi surveillance, the NSA-Affair, and contemporary
German cinema Laura Heins; 25. Hans Fallada, the Nazis, and the defense of
privacy Roger Crockett; 26. 'It runs its secret course in public' -
watching the mass ornament with Dr Mabuse Summer Renault-Steele; 27.
Secrecy, surveillance, spy fiction: myth-making and the misunderstanding of
trust in the transatlantic intelligence relationship Eva Jobs; 28.
CITIZENME: what Laura Poitras got wrong about the NSA-Affair Russell Miller
and Stephen Chovanec.
Introduction; Privacy and power: a transatlantic dialogue in the shadow of
the NSA-Affair Russell A. Miller; Part I. Privacy and Data-Protection for
the Digital Age: 1. Foucault's panopticon - a model for NSA surveillance?
Sarah Horowitz; 2. A rose by any other name? The comparative law of the
NSA-Affair Russell A. Miller; 3. Privacy as a public good Joshua Fairfield
and Christoph Engel; 4. The right to data protection: a no right thesis
Ralf Poscher; Part II. Framing the Transatlantic Debate: 5. Privacy,
Rechtsstaatlichkeit, and the legal limits on extraterritorial surveillance
Anne Peters; 6. Privacy, hypocrisy, and a defense of surveillance Benjamin
Wittes; Part III. Transatlantic Perspectives on the NSA-Affair; Section 1.
American Voices: 7. Sensing disturbances in the Force: unofficial
reflections on developments and challenges in the US-Germany security
relationship Ronald Lee; 8. Metadeath: how does metadata surveillance
inform lethal consequences? Margaret Hu; 9. 'We're in this together' -
reframing EU responses to criminal unauthorized disclosures of US
intelligence activities Andrew Borene; 10. Fourth Amendment rights for
nonresident aliens Alec Walen; 11. Forget about it? Harmonizing European
and American protections for privacy, free speech, and due process Dawn
Nunziato; Section 2. European Voices: 12. The challenge of limiting
intelligence agencies' mass surveillance regimes: why Western democracies
cannot give up on communication privacy Konstantin von Notz; 13. German
exceptionalism? The debate about the German foreign intelligence service
(BND) Stefan Heumann; 14. The NSU case - structural reform of intelligence
agencies' involvement in criminal investigations? Marc Engelhart; 15. Legal
restraints on the extraterritorial activities of Germany's intelligence
services Klaus Gärditz; 16. Assessing the CJEU's 'Google decision' - a
tentative first approach Johannes Masing; Part IV. Transnational Legal
Responses to Privacy and Intelligence Gathering; Section 1. International
Law: 17. Towards multilateral standards for foreign surveillance reform Ian
Brown, Morton H. Halperin, Ben Hayes, Ben Scott and Mathias Vermeulen; 18.
Espionage, security interests, and human rights in the second machine age:
NSA mass surveillance and the framework of public international law Silja
Voeneky; 19. The need for an institutionalized and transparent set of
domestic legal rules governing transnational intelligence sharing in
democratic societies Susana Sanchez Ferro; Section 2. European Law: 20.
Developments in European data protection law in the shadow of the
NSA-Affair Jens-Peter Scheider; 21. Why blanket surveillance is no security
blanket: data retention in the UK after the European Data Retention
Directive Lucia Zedner; 22. Do androids forget European sheep? - the CJEU's
concept of a 'right to be forgotten' and the German perspective Bernd
Holznagel and Sarah Hartmann; 23. Adequate transatlantic data exchange in
the shadow of the NSA-Affair Els De Busser; Part V. Transatlantic
Reflections on the Cultural Meaning of Privacy and Intelligence Gathering:
24. The intimacy of Stasi surveillance, the NSA-Affair, and contemporary
German cinema Laura Heins; 25. Hans Fallada, the Nazis, and the defense of
privacy Roger Crockett; 26. 'It runs its secret course in public' -
watching the mass ornament with Dr Mabuse Summer Renault-Steele; 27.
Secrecy, surveillance, spy fiction: myth-making and the misunderstanding of
trust in the transatlantic intelligence relationship Eva Jobs; 28.
CITIZENME: what Laura Poitras got wrong about the NSA-Affair Russell Miller
and Stephen Chovanec.
the NSA-Affair Russell A. Miller; Part I. Privacy and Data-Protection for
the Digital Age: 1. Foucault's panopticon - a model for NSA surveillance?
Sarah Horowitz; 2. A rose by any other name? The comparative law of the
NSA-Affair Russell A. Miller; 3. Privacy as a public good Joshua Fairfield
and Christoph Engel; 4. The right to data protection: a no right thesis
Ralf Poscher; Part II. Framing the Transatlantic Debate: 5. Privacy,
Rechtsstaatlichkeit, and the legal limits on extraterritorial surveillance
Anne Peters; 6. Privacy, hypocrisy, and a defense of surveillance Benjamin
Wittes; Part III. Transatlantic Perspectives on the NSA-Affair; Section 1.
American Voices: 7. Sensing disturbances in the Force: unofficial
reflections on developments and challenges in the US-Germany security
relationship Ronald Lee; 8. Metadeath: how does metadata surveillance
inform lethal consequences? Margaret Hu; 9. 'We're in this together' -
reframing EU responses to criminal unauthorized disclosures of US
intelligence activities Andrew Borene; 10. Fourth Amendment rights for
nonresident aliens Alec Walen; 11. Forget about it? Harmonizing European
and American protections for privacy, free speech, and due process Dawn
Nunziato; Section 2. European Voices: 12. The challenge of limiting
intelligence agencies' mass surveillance regimes: why Western democracies
cannot give up on communication privacy Konstantin von Notz; 13. German
exceptionalism? The debate about the German foreign intelligence service
(BND) Stefan Heumann; 14. The NSU case - structural reform of intelligence
agencies' involvement in criminal investigations? Marc Engelhart; 15. Legal
restraints on the extraterritorial activities of Germany's intelligence
services Klaus Gärditz; 16. Assessing the CJEU's 'Google decision' - a
tentative first approach Johannes Masing; Part IV. Transnational Legal
Responses to Privacy and Intelligence Gathering; Section 1. International
Law: 17. Towards multilateral standards for foreign surveillance reform Ian
Brown, Morton H. Halperin, Ben Hayes, Ben Scott and Mathias Vermeulen; 18.
Espionage, security interests, and human rights in the second machine age:
NSA mass surveillance and the framework of public international law Silja
Voeneky; 19. The need for an institutionalized and transparent set of
domestic legal rules governing transnational intelligence sharing in
democratic societies Susana Sanchez Ferro; Section 2. European Law: 20.
Developments in European data protection law in the shadow of the
NSA-Affair Jens-Peter Scheider; 21. Why blanket surveillance is no security
blanket: data retention in the UK after the European Data Retention
Directive Lucia Zedner; 22. Do androids forget European sheep? - the CJEU's
concept of a 'right to be forgotten' and the German perspective Bernd
Holznagel and Sarah Hartmann; 23. Adequate transatlantic data exchange in
the shadow of the NSA-Affair Els De Busser; Part V. Transatlantic
Reflections on the Cultural Meaning of Privacy and Intelligence Gathering:
24. The intimacy of Stasi surveillance, the NSA-Affair, and contemporary
German cinema Laura Heins; 25. Hans Fallada, the Nazis, and the defense of
privacy Roger Crockett; 26. 'It runs its secret course in public' -
watching the mass ornament with Dr Mabuse Summer Renault-Steele; 27.
Secrecy, surveillance, spy fiction: myth-making and the misunderstanding of
trust in the transatlantic intelligence relationship Eva Jobs; 28.
CITIZENME: what Laura Poitras got wrong about the NSA-Affair Russell Miller
and Stephen Chovanec.