Smart devices, cell phone cameras, social shaming and the loss of the right to a private self: Interview with Michel Paradis about the modern panopticon

IF 1.9 4区 社会学 Q2 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists Pub Date : 2022-09-03 DOI:10.1080/00963402.2022.2109322
D. Drollette
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Abstract

Michel Paradis teaches courses at Columbia University Law School on national security law, international law, the constitution, and the law of war, and is a fellow at the Center on National Security and the National Institute for Military Justice. He is also a senior attorney with the US Defense Department’s Military Commissions Defense Organization, where he has been helping to wrap up the situation with the very last of the detainees of Guantanamo Bay, who are still in legal limbo. (People seem to forget that there are 37 people still detained there.) He was part of a Bar Association presentation last December called “Guantanamo Bay, Torture and Drones: Are We Countering Violent Extremism . . . or Fueling It?” In this interview, Paradis talks with the Bulletin’s executive editor, Dan Drollette Jr., about the the law and the use – and mis-use – of high-tech surveillance in a democracy. Paradis wrote a book in 2020 titled “Last Mission to Tokyo,” about the war crimes trials in the Pacific after World War II. He received his PhD from Oxford University and his law degree from Fordham Law School in New York. (Editor’s note: This interview has been condensed and edited for brevity and clarity.)
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智能设备,手机摄像头,社交羞辱和私人自我权利的丧失:采访米歇尔·帕拉迪斯关于现代监狱
米歇尔·帕拉迪斯在哥伦比亚大学法学院教授国家安全法、国际法、宪法和战争法课程,也是国家安全中心和国家军事司法研究所的研究员。他还是美国国防部军事委员会国防组织的高级律师,在该组织,他一直在帮助解决关塔那摩湾最后一名被拘留者的情况,这些人仍处于法律边缘。(人们似乎忘记了仍有37人被拘留在那里。)去年12月,他参加了律师协会题为“关塔那摩湾、酷刑和无人机:我们是在打击暴力极端主义……还是在助长它?”的演讲。,关于法律以及民主国家中高科技监控的使用和不当使用。Paradis在2020年写了一本名为《最后一次东京任务》的书,讲述了二战后太平洋地区的战争罪审判。他在牛津大学获得博士学位,在纽约福特汉姆法学院获得法律学位。(编者按:为了简洁明了,本次采访经过了精简和编辑。)
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54
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