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Government Surveillance

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Chapter 21.2

Government Surveillance: Balancing Security and Privacy Rights

Explore how government agencies monitor digital communications, what the Constitution says about privacy, and why the debate between security and liberty matters in a democratic society.


What You'll Learn

The Fourth Amendment protects citizens from unreasonable government surveillance activities.
Metadata reveals communication patterns without capturing actual message content directly.
The FISA Court provides judicial oversight of government bulk data collection programs.
Encryption and backdoor access debates highlight tensions between security and privacy.

What You'll Practice

1

Students define key surveillance terms including metadata, encryption, and backdoor.

2

Learners analyze constitutional protections and warrant requirements for digital surveillance.

3

Practice questions evaluate true-or-false statements about government surveillance authority.

Why This Matters

Understanding government surveillance equips students to critically evaluate how democratic societies balance national security with the constitutional privacy rights that protect individual freedom.

This Unit Includes

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Fourth Amendment
Surveillance
Metadata
Encryption
Privacy Rights
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