TY - JOUR
T1 - The limits of (digital) constitutionalism
T2 - Exploring the privacy-security (im) balance in Australia
AU - Mann, Monique
AU - Daly, Angela
AU - Wilson, Michael
AU - Suzor, Nicolas
N1 - Funding Information:
The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: Suzor is the recipient of an Australian Research Council DECRA Fellowship (project number DE160101542).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018, © The Author(s) 2018.
PY - 2018/6
Y1 - 2018/6
N2 - This article explores the challenges of digital constitutionalism in practice through a case study examining how concepts of privacy and security have been framed and contested in Australian cyber security and telecommunications policy-making over the last decade. The Australian Government has formally committed to ‘internet freedom’ norms, including privacy, through membership of the Freedom Online Coalition (FOC). Importantly, however, this commitment is non-binding and designed primarily to guide the development of policy by legislators and the executive government. Through this analysis, we seek to understand if, and how, principles of digital constitutionalism have been incorporated at the national level. Our analysis suggests a fundamental challenge for the project of digital constitutionalism in developing and implementing principles that have practical or legally binding impact on domestic telecommunications and cyber security policy. Australia is the only major Western liberal democracy without comprehensive constitutional human rights or a legislated bill of rights at the federal level; this means that the task of ‘balancing’ what are conceived as competing rights is left only to the legislature. Our analysis shows that despite high-level commitments to privacy as per the Freedom Online Coalition, individual rights are routinely discounted against collective rights to security. We conclude by arguing that, at least in Australia, the domestic conditions limit the practical application and enforcement of digital constitutionalism’s norms.
AB - This article explores the challenges of digital constitutionalism in practice through a case study examining how concepts of privacy and security have been framed and contested in Australian cyber security and telecommunications policy-making over the last decade. The Australian Government has formally committed to ‘internet freedom’ norms, including privacy, through membership of the Freedom Online Coalition (FOC). Importantly, however, this commitment is non-binding and designed primarily to guide the development of policy by legislators and the executive government. Through this analysis, we seek to understand if, and how, principles of digital constitutionalism have been incorporated at the national level. Our analysis suggests a fundamental challenge for the project of digital constitutionalism in developing and implementing principles that have practical or legally binding impact on domestic telecommunications and cyber security policy. Australia is the only major Western liberal democracy without comprehensive constitutional human rights or a legislated bill of rights at the federal level; this means that the task of ‘balancing’ what are conceived as competing rights is left only to the legislature. Our analysis shows that despite high-level commitments to privacy as per the Freedom Online Coalition, individual rights are routinely discounted against collective rights to security. We conclude by arguing that, at least in Australia, the domestic conditions limit the practical application and enforcement of digital constitutionalism’s norms.
KW - Cyber security
KW - digital constitutionalism
KW - human rights
KW - metadata retention
KW - online surveillance
KW - privacy
KW - securitisation
KW - security
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85044030595&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/1748048518757141
DO - 10.1177/1748048518757141
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85044030595
SN - 1748-0485
VL - 80
SP - 369
EP - 384
JO - International Communication Gazette
JF - International Communication Gazette
IS - 4
ER -