Legalizing Illegal Mass Surveillance: A Transnational Perspective on Canada’s Legislative Response to the Expansion of Security Intelligence

Author:

Ogasawara MidoriORCID

Abstract

AbstractThis article offers a transnational perspective on Canada’s legislative response to globally expanded national security intelligence activities in the War on Terror since 2001. I situate Canada’s new legislation against the backdrop of US and Japanese legislative responses and analyze the transition, including Bill C-13 (2014), Bill C-44 (2015), Bill C-51 (2015), and Bill C-59 (2019). I argue that the thrust of this legislative trend has been the active legalization of previously illegal surveillance activities by security intelligence agencies, rather than passive ineffectiveness in restricting state mass surveillance enabled by information and communication technologies. The transition is in synch with a global legislative trend that lowers the legal standards of privacy and personal data protection and weakens checks and balances in democratic governance. As a result, mass surveillance has increasingly undermined and regulated the rule of law, not vice versa.

Funder

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Law,Sociology and Political Science

Reference50 articles.

1. Bill C-44, Protection of Canada from Terrorists Act, 2nd Sess, 41st Parl (Canada). https://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/annualstatutes/2015_9/

2. Bill C-59, An Act respecting national security matters, 1st Sess, 42nd Parl (Canada).

3. International Civil Liberties Monitoring Group (ICLMG). 2020. Time to end Canada’s no fly list once and for all. November 5. https://iclmg.ca/time-to-end-no-fly-list/

4. Bill C-51, An Act to enact the Security of Canada Information Sharing Act and the Secure Air Travel Act, to amend the Criminal Code, the Canadian Security Intelligence Service Act and the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act and to make related and consequential amendments to other Acts, 2nd Sess, 41st Parl (Canada).

5. Convention on Cybercrime . 2001. Council of Europe. https://rm.coe.int/CoERMPublicCommonSearchServices/DisplayDCTMContent?documentId=0900001680081561

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