Skip to product information
Technology moves faster than courts. The government's digital surveillance capabilities — the ability to track location through cell towers, access communications through cloud service providers, map associations through metadata, and reconstruct entire lives through digital records — have outpaced the constitutional doctrine designed to restrain them. The constitutional warrior must understand both the doctrinal tools the Supreme Court has already provided and the emerging arguments that will define the next generation of digital rights law.
The Constitutional Technology Warrior: The Complete Guide to Digital Rights, the Fourth Amendment, and the Constitutional Framework for Emerging Technology is Volume XXIV of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series — the foundational guide to the Fourth Amendment and First Amendment dimensions of digital rights practice.
Wayne Richard Evangelista covers the digital constitutional law landscape as it stood when this early edition was written: Riley v. California's protection of cell phone data, Carpenter v. United States's limitation of the third-party doctrine for cell site location records, the digital warrant framework for searching electronic devices, the First Amendment constraints on government regulation of online speech, and the constitutional dimensions of government surveillance programs including PRISM, stingray devices, and national security letter programs.
For practitioners who need the historical doctrinal context for the dramatic developments in digital constitutional law since Carpenter, and for those working on digital rights cases where this early doctrinal foundation directly governs, this volume provides the essential framework. Volume XLV of the series updates and expands the technology analysis comprehensively for the current landscape.
The Constitutional Technology Warrior (Early Edition)
$69.99
Sale price
$69.99
Regular price