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2019 | 25 | 5-20

Article title

How Republicans and Democrats Strengthen Secret Surveillance in the United States

Authors

Content

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Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
The purpose of the paper is to assess the relationship between secrecy and transparency in the pre- and post-Snowden eras in the United States. The Author analyzes, from both political and legal perspectives, the sources and outcomes of the U.S. politics of national security with a special focus on domestic and intelligence surveillance measures. The core argument of the paper is that, due to the role of the executive which has always promoted the culture of secrecy, there is no chance for the demanded transparency in national security surveillance, despite the controlling powers of the legislative and judiciary. As the analysis proves, the United States in the post-Snowden era seems to be the most transparent and secretive state, at the same time.

Year

Issue

25

Pages

5-20

Physical description

Contributors

  • Jagiellonian University, Poland

References

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Notes

EN
The article is a result of the Polish-German research project Beethoven-2 Trust and Transparency in an Age of Surveillance. American, German and Polish perspective funded by the Polish National Science Center (UMO-2016/23/G/HS5/01864).

Document Type

Publication order reference

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.mhp-94dd84b6-63fc-4b0f-bd1f-bf0405cf245c
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