Críticas:
A very good piece of work on a possible grave conflict. Let us not abandon freedom to preserve it. - John Kenneth Galbraith, Harvard University ""The normal tension between freedom and security is under particular strain since 9-11, and Mark Sidel documents the silent and steady erosion of privacy and the public's right to know. At the same time that government agencies and their private sector partners are quietly building databases to store information about the public, it is becoming harder and harder for the public to learn what government agencies themselves are up to even about those new databases. Mark Sidel shows how government for, by, and of the people can quietly become an indirect casualty in a war on terrorism, unless we are vigilant."" - Sen. Patrick Leahy, Ranking Member, Senate Judiciary Committee ""More Secure, Less Free? deftly parses the major civil liberties debates swirling around the policies of the US government in the aftermath of 9/11, and holds some of the most troubling aspects of these policies up for intense scrutiny. The question Mark Sidel poses in his title is at the fulcrum of America's conscience, and his reasoned consideration is sure to inform concerned readers at every level."" - Anthony Romero, Executive Director, ACLU ""An essential and exceptionally well-documented resource for all civil libertarians concerned with the encroachments on liberties in the name of 'security.'"" - Michael Gorman, President-elect, American Library Association
Reseña del editor:
The first comprehensive analysis of the full range of antiterror initiatives undertaken in the United States after the 2001 terrorist attacks Unlike earlier books published shortly after the September 11 attacks that focus on the Patriot Act, More Secure, Less Free? covers the Patriot Act but goes well beyond, analyzing Total Information Awareness, Terrorist Information and Prevention System (TIPS), Computer Assisted Passenger Prescreening System II (CAPPS II), and a number of other "second wave" antiterror initiatives. It's also the first book of its kind to go beyond federal measures to explain the devolution of antiterror policies to the states, and now to the military as well. Author Mark Sidel discusses the continuing debates on antiterror law at the state level, with a focus on the important states of New York, California, and Michigan, and explains how the military-through an informant program known as "Eagle Eyes"-is now taking a direct hand in domestic antiterror efforts. The volume also discusses and analyzes crucially important aspects of American antiterror policy that have been largely ignored in other volumes and discusses the effects of antiterror policy on the American academic world and the American nonprofit sector, for example. And it provides the first comparative perspectives on U.S. antiterror policy yet published in an American volume, discussing antiterror initiatives in Great Britain, Australia, and India and contrasting those to the American experience. More Secure, Less Free? is important and essential reading for anyone interested in an analytical perspective on American antiterror policy since September 11 that goes well beyond the Patriot Act. Mark Sidel is Associate Professor of Law at the University of Iowa and a research scholar at the University's Obermann Center for Advanced Studies.
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