Description

Book Synopsis
Surveillance in America is a study of FBI surveillance practices and policies since 1920 based on recently declassified FBI files. This wide-ranging study looks at such subjects as the media, academic historians, the Watergate crisis, and surveillance of the American working class.

Trade Review
Can we speak freely if the FBI is listening in? Greenberg addresses this critical question through a sweeping and documented historical review of nearly a century of political spying. Read it; the FBI will. -- David Cole, Author of No Equal Justice: Race and Class in the American Criminal Justice System
In this tightly argued and impressively researched monograph, Greenberg, the author of the well-received Dangers of Dissent (2010), extends his earlier analysis of the threat expansive surveillance operations pose to civil liberties. Based on research in FBI records released in response to (his own and other) Freedom of Information Act requests and extensive reading of the relevant secondary literature, this book surveys FBI surveillance operations since 1920. Greenberg recounts in detail how FBI investigations extended beyond legitimate security threats to encompass radical and labor union activists, historians and prominent writers, reporters, and social justice proponents, and, in an interesting chapter, relates FBI Associate Director W. Mark Felt's questionable actions in the Watergate affair. In addition, the author pinpoints the fundamental shift in the conduct of such operations from the secret use of recognizably illegal or extralegal investigative procedures during the post-World War I through the Cold War eras to their legalization through permissive, wide-ranging legislation enacted in the 1990s, 2001, and 2008. Greenberg's sobering account offers a welcome perspective for assessing the current debate over the proper balance between security and liberty interests in the wake of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All levels/libraries. * CHOICE *

Table of Contents
Introduction 1. A Class Analysis of Early FBI Spying 2. Manipulating the Media 3. Threatening Historians 4. The Ideology of the FBI 5. The Deep Throat Faction 6. Surveillance Society Policing 7. Postscript: The 10th Anniversary of 9/11

Surveillance in America

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    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Sat 20 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback by Ivan Greenberg

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      View other formats and editions of Surveillance in America by Ivan Greenberg

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 11/22/2013 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780739189719, 978-0739189719
      ISBN10: 0739189719

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Surveillance in America is a study of FBI surveillance practices and policies since 1920 based on recently declassified FBI files. This wide-ranging study looks at such subjects as the media, academic historians, the Watergate crisis, and surveillance of the American working class.

      Trade Review
      Can we speak freely if the FBI is listening in? Greenberg addresses this critical question through a sweeping and documented historical review of nearly a century of political spying. Read it; the FBI will. -- David Cole, Author of No Equal Justice: Race and Class in the American Criminal Justice System
      In this tightly argued and impressively researched monograph, Greenberg, the author of the well-received Dangers of Dissent (2010), extends his earlier analysis of the threat expansive surveillance operations pose to civil liberties. Based on research in FBI records released in response to (his own and other) Freedom of Information Act requests and extensive reading of the relevant secondary literature, this book surveys FBI surveillance operations since 1920. Greenberg recounts in detail how FBI investigations extended beyond legitimate security threats to encompass radical and labor union activists, historians and prominent writers, reporters, and social justice proponents, and, in an interesting chapter, relates FBI Associate Director W. Mark Felt's questionable actions in the Watergate affair. In addition, the author pinpoints the fundamental shift in the conduct of such operations from the secret use of recognizably illegal or extralegal investigative procedures during the post-World War I through the Cold War eras to their legalization through permissive, wide-ranging legislation enacted in the 1990s, 2001, and 2008. Greenberg's sobering account offers a welcome perspective for assessing the current debate over the proper balance between security and liberty interests in the wake of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All levels/libraries. * CHOICE *

      Table of Contents
      Introduction 1. A Class Analysis of Early FBI Spying 2. Manipulating the Media 3. Threatening Historians 4. The Ideology of the FBI 5. The Deep Throat Faction 6. Surveillance Society Policing 7. Postscript: The 10th Anniversary of 9/11

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