"Technology shapes our political identities and the institutions we create and then use to make real the policies we want. Ray Brescia draws on a wide range of social scientific learning about political identity, institutions, and social movements to critique the current state of our law affecting the role of social media in shaping political identity. His intriguing proposal for 'digital zoning, ' a regulatory regime predicated on robust disclosure and user choice, should become an important part of the on-going discussions about what our regulatory regime should become."--Mark Tushnet, William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Law emeritus, Harvard Law School
"A farsighted book that portrays the devastating consequences of unfettered surveillance capitalism."-- "Kirkus Reviews"
"Brescia deftly explains how political privacy--the shelter under which we are able to build and express our identity and community--plays a critical role in a healthy democratic society. The Private is Political expertly illustrates the negative effects of eroded political privacy, and promotes an alternative approach to protecting this critical component of democracy."--Jeffrey L. Vagle, Georgia State University College of Law
"Pushing us to look beyond the shoe ads following users around the internet, Brescia masterfully directs us to prioritize the ways political identity, civic engagement, and democratic society demand strong privacy protections."--Meg Leta Jones, author of The Character of Consent: The History of Cookies and Future of Technology Policy
"At once urgent and sober, The Private is Political fundamentally reframes the threat that panopticon surveillance technologies pose to self-government and then designs institutions to meet and defeat the danger. Brescia's wide-ranging analysis--which embeds vivid facts in powerful theories from law, philosophy, and political economy--provides an essential guide to the way we must learn to live now, if we want to keep our democracy."--Daniel Markovitz, Yale Law School
"A substantial piece of scholarship that will advance thinking about the critical questions related to information privacy today. Brescia infuses early American history with contemporary American legal and political theory to raise a fundamental concern with digital surveillance. The stakes of his argument are clear: privacy is essential if we are to maintain our ability to engage in political change."--Anupam Chander, Georgetown University Law Center
"The Private is Political is a must read for anyone concerned about the future of our privacy and of our democracy. Brescia's highly original focus on 'political privacy' allows him to show us what is truly at stake in the privacy wars: our very identity and, with it, our capacity for civic action and social change. Having pinpointed the problem, Brescia offers cogent and achievable steps for reclaiming control over our identities and our society. The growing power of AI, and the metastasizing threats to democracy, make this the perfect book for its time."--Dennis Hirsch, Ohio State University Moritz College of Law