Privacy in the Digital Age: 21st-Century Challenges to the Fourth Amendment [2 volumes]
by-
eBook
9781440829710
MLA
Lind, Nancy and Rankin, Erik. Privacy in the Digital Age: 21st-Century Challenges to the Fourth Amendment [2 volumes]. Praeger, 2015. ABC-CLIO, publisher.abc-clio.com/9781440829710.
Chicago Manual of Style
Lind, Nancy, and Erik Rankin. Privacy in the Digital Age: 21st-Century Challenges to the Fourth Amendment [2 volumes]. Praeger, 2015. http://publisher.abc-clio.com/9781440829710
APA
Lind, N. & Rankin, E. (2015). Privacy in the Digital Age: 21st-Century Challenges to the Fourth Amendment [2 volumes]. Retrieved from http://publisher.abc-clio.com/9781440829710
- Description
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A collection of expert essays examines the privacy rights that have been lost in the post-9/11 era—giving students and others the knowledge they need to take back their constitutional protections.
- Table of Contents
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Table of Contents
Privacy in the Digital Age: 21st-Century Challenges to the Fourth Amendment [2 volumes]
Author(s): Lind, Nancy; Rankin, Erik;Contributors: Lind, Nancy; Lind, Nancy; Rankin, Erik; Rankin, Erik;Abstract:A collection of expert essays examines the privacy rights that have been lost in the post-9/11 era—giving students and others the knowledge they need to take back their constitutional protections.
Editor(s): Lind, Nancy; Rankin, Erik;SortTitle: privacy in the digital age: 21st-century challenges to the fourth amendment [2 volumes]Author Info:Nancy S. LindeditorNancy S. LindauthorErik RankineditorErik RankinauthoreISBN-13: 9781440829710Cover Image URL: ~~FreeAttachments/9781440829710.jpgPrint ISBN-13: 9781440829703Imprint: PraegerPages: 704Publication Date: 20150630Table of Contents pages: 1 2
- Cover Cover11
- Copyright iv5
- Contents v6
- Acknowledgments ix10
- Introduction xi12
- Privacy in the Digital Age iii4
- Volume 1 iii4
- Title iii4
- 1. Developments on the Fourth Amendment and Privacy to the 21st Century 122
- Introduction 122
- Colonial Times and Late 18th Century 223
- 19th Century 728
- 20th Century 1536
- Definitions “of the People,” Search, Seizure, Unreasonable, Probable Cause 1637
- Weeks v. United States (1914) and the Exclusionary Rule 1738
- Extending the Fourth: Mapp v. Ohio (1961) 1839
- Exceptions to Exclusionary Rule: Prohibition Rears Its Ugly Head 1940
- Communications and Surveillance in the 20th Century 2041
- Wiretapping and Olmstead v. United States (1928) 2243
- Reasonable Expectation of Privacy 2243
- United States v. Karo (1984) 2748
- Presidential Wiretapping and Watergate 2748
- The Burger Court 2950
- Search and Seizures and the Press 3152
- 20th-Century Conclusion and Beyond 3253
- Notes 3253
- 2. Wiretaps, Electronic Surveillance, and the Fourth Amendment 3556
- 3. Forensic DNA Analysis, the Fourth Amendment, and Personal Privacy 6182
- 4. Biometric Identification as a Requirement for Work Access and Forced Surrendering of Private Information 83104
- 5. Employee Expectations of Privacy in the Workplace: Drug Tests, Work Spaces, Computers, and Social Media 109130
- Introduction: Basics of the Fourth Amendment and the Concept of State Action 110131
- The Concept of State Action 111132
- The Consequences of the Concept of State Action for Employees in the Private Sector 113134
- The Fourth Amendment and Employees in the Public Sector 114135
- Conclusion 124145
- Notes 125146
- 6. The Privacy Rights of Minors in a Digital Age 131152
- Minors and the Bill of Rights 131152
- Pre–Digital Age 132153
- The Digital Age 132153
- Third-Party Doctrine 134155
- Privacy Defined 135156
- Reasonable Expectation of Privacy 135156
- Context and Exceptions 136157
- Minors’ Special Status 136157
- Minors’ Privacy in the Family 137158
- Vicarious Consent Rule 137158
- Minor’s Rights and Parents—Commentary 138159
- Minors as Solo Actors 138159
- Minors’ Privacy in the School Setting 138159
- Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act 142163
- Conclusion 143164
- Notes 144165
- 7. Library Patrons and the National Security State 151172
- 8. Where Is the Suspect? The Potential for the Use of Private Location-Tracking Data by Law Enforcement 175196
- Introduction: From Olmstead to Katz to U.S. v. Jones 175196
- What are the Competing Legal Standards? 179200
- Sources of Data 180201
- Current Practices and Ownership of Data 183204
- The Importance of the Standard of Review 186207
- State Laws that Provide Greater Protections of Privacy 189210
- The Effects of Existing Federal Statutes 191212
- Conclusion 191212
- Notes 193214
- 9. Drones and Police Practices 199220
- Unmanned Aircraft Systems, Unmanned Aerial Vehicles, and Drones 200221
- Select Usages of Drones by Law Enforcement Agencies 201222
- Incentives for Law Enforcement to Adopt Drones 202223
- Law Enforcement Procedures for Drones 204225
- Drones and the Fourth Amendment 206227
- The Supreme Court and Aerial Surveillance 207228
- The Supreme Court and Emerging Technologies 210231
- Police Procedures, Congress, and State Legislatures 212233
- Onward and Upward 214235
- Notes 215236
- 10. So Long, Stakeout? GPS Tracking and the Fourth Amendment 221242
- 11. Drones, Domestic Surveillance, and Privacy: Legal and Statutory Implications 243264
- 12. 21st-Century Developments in Fourth Amendment Privacy Law 267288
- Legal Regimes 268289
- Continuity and Change 269290
- The Meaning of the Fourth Amendment 269290
- Does the Fourth Amendment Require Search Warrants? 275296
- The Exclusionary Rule 285306
- Informational Privacy and the Security State 289310
- The Federal Bureau of Investigation 292313
- The National Security Model of Justice 296317
- Interest Groups and Informational Privacy 301322
- Conclusions 302323
- Notes 303324
- 13. The Changing Expectations of Privacy in the Digital Age 307328
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