I have just posted a 5-page response to a recent essay by Jack Balkin on what Balkin calls “The National Surveillance State.” My response, forthcoming in the Minnesota Law Review, is titled The National Surveillance State: A Response to Balkin.
The abstract:
In his recent Lockhart lecture, published in this journal as “The Constitution in the National Surveillance State,” Jack Balkin warns of a “new form of governance” that he calls “The National Surveillance State.” This brief response article argues that the changes Balkin details should be understood as a technology problem instead of a governance problem. We are witnessing a broad societal shift away from human observation and towards computerization. The widespread use of computers and the introduction of digital information have caused dramatic changes in how individuals can learn what others are doing. The government’s goals have not changed, but the technological playing field has. The law must respond because technology has changed, not because a new form of governance has emerged. Understanding the changes as a technology problem rather than a governance problem also suggests solutions that draw support from a wide political base rather than a narrow one.
You can read Balkin’s lecture that I am responding to here:The Constitution in the National Surveillance State.