2 Essay 83.1 Beyond Cheneyism and Snowdenism Cass R. Sunstein Robert Walmsley University Professor, Harvard University Cost-Benefit Analysis Cybersecurity Institutional Design National Security
2 Essay 83.1 The Norm against Economic Espionage for the Benefit of Private Firms: Some Theoretical Reflections Samuel J. Rascoff Professor of Law, Faculty Director, Center on Law and Security, NYU School of Law Business Organizations Cybersecurity Privacy Separation of Powers
2 Essay 83.1 Privacy-Privacy Tradeoffs David E. Pozen Associate Professor, Columbia Law School Cybersecurity Privacy Separation of Powers
2 Essay 83.1 Separation of Powers and Centripetal Forces: Implications for the Institutional Design and Constitutionality of Our National-Security State Jon D. Michaels Professor of Law, UCLA School of Law Constitutional Law Cybersecurity Institutional Design National Security Separation of Powers
2 Essay 83.1 How the Fourth Amendment and the Separation of Powers Rise (and Fall) Together Aziz Z. Huq Frank and Bernice J. Greenberg Professor of Law, The University of Chicago Law School Cybersecurity Fourth Amendment Institutional Design Separation of Powers
2 Essay 83.1 Big Data and Bad Data: On the Sensitivity of Security Policy to Imperfect Information James T. Graves PhD Candidate (Engineering and Public Policy) 2016, Carnegie Mellon University Alessandro Acquisti Professor of Information Technology and Public Policy, Carnegie Mellon University Nicolas Christin Assistant Research Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Carnegie Mellon University Cybersecurity Institutional Design Law and Economics Law Enforcement/Policing National Security
2 Essay 83.1 Checks and Balances from Abroad Ashley Deeks Associate Professor of Law, University of Virginia School of Law Cybersecurity International Law Privacy Separation of Powers
2 Essay Territoriality, Technology, and National Security Zachary D. Clopton Assistant Professor of Law, Cornell Law School Cybersecurity International Law National Security Technology
2 Essay 83.1 Can Americans Resist Surveillance? Ryan Calo Assistant Professor of Law, University of Washington School of Law and (by courtesy) University of Washington Information School; Affiliate Scholar, Stanford Law School Center for Internet and Society and Yale Law School Information Society Project Cybersecurity Fourth Amendment Freedom from Unreasonable Search and Seizure Privacy Technology
2 Essay 83.1 Cyberwar, International Politics, and Institutional Design Daniel Abebe Harold J. and Marion F. Green Professor of Law, The University of Chicago Law School Cybersecurity Institutional Design International Law Technology Telecommunications