ABSTRACT

Amitai Etzioni argues that societies must find a way to balance individual rights and the common good. This point of balance may change as new technologies develop, the natural and international environments change, and new social forces arise. Some believe the United States may be unduly short-changing individual rights that need to be better protected. Specifically, should the press be granted more protection? Or should its ability to publish state secrets be limited? Should surveillance of Americans and others be curtailed? Should American terrorists be treated differently from others? How one answers these questions, Etzioni shows, invites a larger fundamental question: Where is the proper point of balance between rights and security? Etzioni implements the social philosophy, "liberal communitarianism." Its key assumptions are that neither individual rights nor the common good should be privileged, that both are core values, and that a balance is necessary between them. Etzioni argues that we need to find a new balance between our desire for more goods, services, and affluence, particularly because economic growth may continue to be slow and jobs anemic. The key question is what makes a good life, especially for those whose basic needs are sated.

part I|1 pages

Individual Rights versus the Common Good

chapter 1|42 pages

Limit Freedom of the Press?

chapter 2|43 pages

How Much Surveillance Is Legitimate?

part II|1 pages

Privacy

chapter 4|26 pages

A Cyber Age Privacy Doctrine

chapter 5|21 pages

The Privacy Merchants

part III|1 pages

The New Politics

chapter 6|42 pages

Is There a Gridlock?

chapter 7|27 pages

The Scope of Corruption

chapter 8|6 pages

Regulatory Capture

chapter 9|18 pages

Is Transparency the Best Disinfectant?

chapter 10|10 pages

Cutting “Entitlements”?

part 4|1 pages

The Politics of Security

chapter 12|13 pages

The Great Drone Debate

chapter 14|11 pages

Mar: Mutually Assured Restraint

part V|1 pages

Public Philosophy

chapter 15|25 pages

Public/Private Divide