Gligorijevic, JelenaBrunon-Ernst, AnneGligorijevic, JelenaManderson, DesmondWrobel, Claire2025-12-012025-12-019781399505109https://hdl.handle.net/1885/733794606Privacy is implicated whenever surveillance policies and practices are implemented. In liberal democracies, the onus rests upon those using surveillance, especially governments, to justify incursions on individual privacy. A prominent argument for justifying governmental surveillance is collective security. Security concerns about criminality have seen police use surveillance, including phone-tapping. National security concerns have seen larger-scale surveillance, including metadata collection. Medical security is a growing concern raised to support surveillance, including cellular monitoring of individuals’ movements.application/pdfen-AU© 2023 the chapters their several authorsPrivacy as Liberty and Security: Implications for the Legitimacy of Governmental Surveillance202310.1515/9781399505109-0072023-10-29