Social Norms in Fourth Amendment Law

IF 2.1 2区 社会学 Q1 LAW
Matthew Tokson,Ari Waldman
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Courts often look to existing social norms to resolve difficult questions in Fourth Amendment law. In theory, these norms can provide an objective basis for courts’ constitutional decisions, grounding Fourth Amendment law in familiar societal attitudes and beliefs. In reality, however, social norms can shift rapidly, are constantly being contested, and frequently reflect outmoded and discriminatory concepts. This Article draws on contemporary sociological literatures on norms and technology to reveal how courts’ reliance on norms leads to several identifiable errors in Fourth Amendment jurisprudence.Courts assessing social norms generally adopt what we call the closure principle, or the idea that social norms can be permanently settled. Meanwhile, courts confronting new technologies often adopt the nonintervention principle, or the idea that courts should refrain from addressing the Fourth Amendment implications of new surveillance practices until the relevant social norms become clear. Both approaches are flawed, and they have substantial negative effects for equality and privacy. By adopting norms perceived as closed, courts may embed antiquated norms in Fourth Amendment law—norms that often involve discrimination on the basis of race, gender, or class. By declining to intervene when norms are undeveloped, courts cede power over norm creation to companies that design new technologies based on data-extractive business models. Further, judicial norm reliance and nonintervention facilitate surveillance creep, the extension of familiar data-gathering infrastructures to new types of surveillance.This Article provides, for the first time, a full, critical account of the role of social norms in Fourth Amendment law. It details and challenges courts’ reliance on social norms in virtually every aspect of Fourth Amendment jurisprudence. And it explores potential new directions for Fourth Amendment law, including novel doctrinal paradigms, different conceptions of stare decisis in the Fourth Amendment context, and alternative institutional regimes for regulating government surveillance.
第四次法律修正案中的社会规范
法院经常参照现有的社会规范来解决第四修正案法律中的难题。理论上,这些规范可以为法院的宪法裁决提供客观基础,将第四修正案置于熟悉的社会态度和信仰中。然而,在现实中,社会规范可以迅速改变,不断受到质疑,并经常反映过时和歧视性的概念。本文借鉴了当代关于规范和技术的社会学文献,揭示了法院对规范的依赖如何导致第四修正案法理学中的几个可识别的错误。评估社会规范的法院通常采用我们所说的封闭原则,或者社会规范可以永久解决的想法。与此同时,面对新技术的法院往往采用不干预原则,或者认为法院应该在相关的社会规范变得清晰之前,避免处理第四条修正案对新监视做法的影响。这两种方法都有缺陷,它们对平等和隐私产生了实质性的负面影响。通过采用被认为是封闭的规范,法院可能会在第四修正案法律中嵌入过时的规范——这些规范通常涉及基于种族、性别或阶级的歧视。在规范尚未形成时,法院拒绝干预,将规范制定的权力交给了基于数据提取商业模式设计新技术的公司。此外,司法规范的依赖和不干预促进了监视的蔓延,将熟悉的数据收集基础设施扩展到新的监视类型。这篇文章第一次对第四修正案中社会规范的作用进行了全面的、批判性的阐述。它详细说明并挑战了法院在第四修正案判例的几乎每个方面对社会规范的依赖。它还探讨了第四修正案法律的潜在新方向,包括新的理论范式,第四修正案背景下的“凝视决定”的不同概念,以及监管政府监督的替代制度制度。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
3.70%
发文量
38
期刊介绍: The Michigan Law Review is a journal of legal scholarship. Eight issues are published annually. Seven of each volume"s eight issues ordinarily are composed of two major parts: Articles by legal scholars and practitioners, and Notes written by the student editors. One issue in each volume is devoted to book reviews. Occasionally, special issues are devoted to symposia or colloquia. First Impressions, the online companion to the Michigan Law Review, publishes op-ed length articles by academics, judges, and practitioners on current legal issues. This extension of the printed journal facilitates quick dissemination of the legal community’s initial impressions of important judicial decisions, legislative developments, and timely legal policy issues.
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