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- Connexions
Volume 4, Number 1 - February 1979 - National Security/Securite Nationale Resource Type: Serial Publication (Periodical) Published: 1979
- Connexions
Volume 5, Number 1 - January 1980 - Literacy/Alphabetisation Resource Type: Serial Publication (Periodical) Published: 1980
- Connexions
Volume 9, Number 2 - Summer 1984 - Rights and Liberties - A Digest of Resources & Groups for Social Resource Type: Serial Publication (Periodical) Published: 1984
- Connexions Digest
Issue 54 - February 1992- A Social Change Sourcebook Resource Type: Serial Publication (Periodical) Published: 1992
- Goodmans LLP
Media Profile in Sources Resource Type: Organization
- Obama defiant over NSA revelations ahead of summit with Chinese premier
Resource Type: Article Published: 2013 President says oversight of NSA surveillance programme should be left to Congress in comments criticising media 'hype.'
- The Public Interest Advocacy Centre
Media Profile in Sources Resource Type: Organization
- Recommendations on the right to be forgotten
Resource Type: Article Published: 2014 On the problems for the protection of freedom of expression and the right to information posed by the right to be removed from search engine results and, more broadly, the right to be forgotten. Privacy and freedom of expression are fundamental rights of equal value. Whenever one conflicts with the other, a balance must be reached under a judges authority because, as a matter of principle, one cannot be given more importance than the other.
- Stikeman Elliott LLP
Media Profile in Sources Resource Type: Organization
- UN slams UK surveillance law, calls for privacy reforms in Canada, France and Macedonia
Resource Type: Article Published: 2015 In yet another blow to the UK's surveillance proponents, the UN Human Rights Committee has criticised the British legal regime governing the interception of communications, observing that it allows for mass surveillance and lacks sufficient safeguards.
- Why Do We Expose Ourselves?
Resource Type: Article Published: 2016 Among critics of technological surveillance, there are two allusions so commonplace they have crossed into the realm of cliché. One, as you have probably already guessed, is George Orwell's Big Brother, from 1984. The other is Michel Foucaults panopticon -- a vision, adapted from Jeremy Bentham, of a prison in which captives cannot tell if or when they are being watched. Today, both of these touchstones are considered chillingly prophetic. But in Exposed: Desire and Disobedience in the Digital Age, Bernard Harcourt has another suggestion: Both of them are insufficient.
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AlterLinks
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