Constitutional lawyer and civil liberties advocate talks about “Going Dark”
November 15, 2016 at 7:00 pm
TORONTO,
August 23, 2016—The Royal Ontario Museum (ROM) will present its annual
Eva Holtby Lecture on Contemporary Culture
on November 15, 2016 at 7:00 pm featuring Jameel Jaffer, Executive
Director of the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia
University. In his talk,
Going Dark, Jaffer will explore the phenomenon of official
secrecy and the legal, political, and social repercussions of allowing
democratic governments to withhold information about national security
policy from the public.
Since
9/11, the impulse to protect “national security” has led democratic
governments to become increasingly secretive.
With many of their most consequential decisions—about war,
interrogation, detention, and surveillance—being made behind closed
doors, democratic governments are “going dark.” Should we accept
official secrecy as a necessary response to new security threats—or
has official secrecy itself become a threat? With new wars abroad, and
new surveillance programs at home, the question is more pressing than
ever.
As
Deputy Legal Director at the American Civil Liberties Union, Jameel
Jaffer argued cases before the U.S. Supreme Court,
as well as multiple appeals courts, and supervised the organization’s
work on national security, free speech, privacy, technology, and
international human rights.
He has litigated challenges to the National
Security Agency's call-tracking program, the Patriot
Act's "national security letter" provision, and “targeted killing” by
the CIA. He also litigated a landmark case under the Freedom of
Information Act that resulted in the release of the Bush
administration's "torture memos.”
Tickets to the Eva Holtby Lecture are available at
rom.on.ca
and priced at: ROM Members ($18.00 plus HST), General Public ($20.00 + HST) and Teachers and Students ($15.00 + HST).
Jaffer's new book, The Drone Memos Targeted Killing, Secrecy, and the Law will be for sale and signing during
the post-talk reception.
The Eva Holtby lecture is generously supported by the Holtby and Schury Families.
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