Please join the Center for Private Law and the LPE Project for a lunch talk with Prof. Ray Brescia of Albany Law School about his timely and fascinating new book, “The Private is Political: Identity and Democracy in the Age of Surveillance Capitalism.” Prof. Brescia is a widely recognized expert on law and technology, privacy law, and the changing face of the legal profession. The discussion will be moderated by Andrew Miller, Director of the Private Law Clinic at YLS.
See below for additional background on Prof. Brescia’s book:
“It has become alarmingly clear that our online actions are less private than we’re led to believe. Our data is routinely sold and shared with companies who want to sell us something, political actors who want to analyze our behavior, and law enforcement who seek to limit our actions.
The Private is Political explores the failure of existing legal systems and institutions to protect our online presence and identities. Examining the ways in which the digital space is under threat from both governments and private actors, Ray Brescia reveals how the rise of private surveillance prevents individuals from organizing with others who might help to catalyze change in their lives. Brescia argues that we are not far from a world where surveillance chills not just our speech, but our very identities. This will ultimately stifle our ability to live full lives, realize democracy, and even shape the laws that affect our privacy itself.
Beyond merely identifying the harms to individuals from privacy violations, Brescia furthers our understanding of privacy by identifying and naming political privacy and the integrity of identity as central to democracy. The Private is Political empowers consumers by outlining a roadmap for a comprehensive privacy regime, leveraging various institutions to collectively safeguard privacy rights.”
Sponsoring Organization(s)
Center for Private Law
LPE Project