In February 2015, the UK’s Investigatory Powers Tribunal ruled that data sharing systems between the US and UK intelligence services had been unlawful from their inception until December 2014, when key disclosures about them were made. The deceptively simple ruling revealed a great deal about the processes and systems that govern surveillance in the UK, about the strength of the oversight systems, and about the need for reform of both the law and the enforcement of that law. This piece analyses the case in the context of a new atmosphere and environment surrounding surveillance law in the UK: fitting it within a bigger pattern where more transparency is being demanded and more accountability is required
As the clock ticks down to 31 December 2020, the UK government has repeatedly invoked the concept of...
The introduction to the second edition of Understanding & Responding to Behaviour that Challenges in...
Two experiments are reported in which people resolve references to sets of entities (e.g. lies) that...
In February 2015, the UK’s Investigatory Powers Tribunal ruled that data sharing systems between the...
As communication technology has grown, so has the potential for crimes to be committed with the new ...
Joelle Grogan (Middlesex University) explains the law and governance put in place by the UK governme...
As the Withdrawal Agreement got massively defeated in the House of Commons the risks of a no deal ar...
This chapter in the edited collection 'Tricky Design: The Ethics of Things', explores the growing us...
Leviathan, a mythical creature in Judaism, was used by philosopher Thomas Hobbes to symbolise the ru...
This article is the foreword to Dr Paul Harpur's 'Discrimination, Copyright and Equality: Law Openin...
Leviathan, a mythical creature in Judaism, was used by philosopher Thomas Hobbes to symbolise the ru...
Leviathan, a mythical creature in Judaism, was used by philosopher Thomas Hobbes to symbolise the ru...
This thesis traces the influence that transnational networks had on the early advocacy campaigns of ...
In February 2016, NUS commissioned the Runnymede Trust to carry out an independent review to investi...
Following the end of a long-running Freedom of Information battle with the Cabinet Office over the r...
As the clock ticks down to 31 December 2020, the UK government has repeatedly invoked the concept of...
The introduction to the second edition of Understanding & Responding to Behaviour that Challenges in...
Two experiments are reported in which people resolve references to sets of entities (e.g. lies) that...
In February 2015, the UK’s Investigatory Powers Tribunal ruled that data sharing systems between the...
As communication technology has grown, so has the potential for crimes to be committed with the new ...
Joelle Grogan (Middlesex University) explains the law and governance put in place by the UK governme...
As the Withdrawal Agreement got massively defeated in the House of Commons the risks of a no deal ar...
This chapter in the edited collection 'Tricky Design: The Ethics of Things', explores the growing us...
Leviathan, a mythical creature in Judaism, was used by philosopher Thomas Hobbes to symbolise the ru...
This article is the foreword to Dr Paul Harpur's 'Discrimination, Copyright and Equality: Law Openin...
Leviathan, a mythical creature in Judaism, was used by philosopher Thomas Hobbes to symbolise the ru...
Leviathan, a mythical creature in Judaism, was used by philosopher Thomas Hobbes to symbolise the ru...
This thesis traces the influence that transnational networks had on the early advocacy campaigns of ...
In February 2016, NUS commissioned the Runnymede Trust to carry out an independent review to investi...
Following the end of a long-running Freedom of Information battle with the Cabinet Office over the r...
As the clock ticks down to 31 December 2020, the UK government has repeatedly invoked the concept of...
The introduction to the second edition of Understanding & Responding to Behaviour that Challenges in...
Two experiments are reported in which people resolve references to sets of entities (e.g. lies) that...