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Index
Cover Page Title Page Dedication Copyright Page Contents Preface 1 Introduction Part I: Values: How We Should Assess and Balance the Values of Privacy and Security
2 The Nothing-to-Hide Argument 3 The All-or-Nothing Fallacy 4 The Danger of Deference 5 Why Privacy Isn’t Merely an Individual Right
Part II: Times of Crisis: How the Law Should Address Matters of National Security
6 The Pendulum Argument 7 The National-Security Argument 8 The Problem with Dissolving the Crime-Espionage Distinction 9 The War-Powers Argument and the Rule of Law
Part III: Constitutional Rights: How the Constitution Should Protect Privacy
10 The Fourth Amendment and the Secrecy Paradigm 11 The Third Party Doctrine and Digital Dossiers 12 The Failure of Looking for a Reasonable Expectation of Privacy 13 The Suspicionless-Searches Argument 14 Should We Keep the Exclusionary Rule? 15 The First Amendment as Criminal Procedure
Part IV: New Technologies: How the Law Should Cope with Changing Technology
16 Will Repealing the Patriot Act Restore Our Privacy? 17 The Law-and-Technology Problem and the Leave-It-to-the-Legislature Argument 18 Video Surveillance and the No-Privacy-in-Public Argument 19 Should the Government Engage in Data Mining? 20 The Luddite Argument, the Titanic Phenomenon, and the Fix-a-Problem Strategy 21 Conclusion
Notes Index About the Author
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