Browsing by Browse by SEO 2008 "810105 Intelligence"
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Publication Open AccessJournal ArticleDesigner Intelligence or Legitimate Concern?: Establishing an Office of National Intelligence and Comprehensively Reviewing the National Intelligence Community Legal FrameworkThe establishment of an Office of National Intelligence (ONI) to collect, co-ordinate, integrate and share intelligence from a variety of sources signals a significant new intelligence facilitative role in Commonwealth governance. The ONI Act provides a reformative framework for implementing the prospective recommendations of the Comprehensive Review of the legal framework governing the National Intelligence Community (NIC). This may well produce an increased securitisation of the Australian polity, a broadened intelligence use and interoperability, and a transformative impact beyond rationally justified national security protective definitions. Harmonising intelligence activities across the NIC may be aided through a Government discourse of safety and security, and the absence of a Charter of Rights to reconcile public policy contestations through criteria of legality, necessity, proportionality and related jurisprudence, from other comparable liberal democratic states.2278 5 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Journal ArticlePublication Guiding Light Or Opaque Filter?: The Minister's Guidelines For The Australian Security Intelligence Organisation In Performing Its Functions And Exercising Its Powers As Relevant To SecurityThe issue in 2020 of new ministerial guidelines ('2020 Guidelines') for the performance by the Australian Security Intelligence Organisa-tion ('ASIO') of its functions and the exercise of its powers as relevant to security, after a 13-year interval, is significant as very substantial changes in ASIO's legislation, powers, resources and priorities occurred during that time.
The 2020 Guidelines reveal critical new issues in their review processes, content and operation. These issues should be addressed if the Guidelines are to achieve optimal, integrated and complementary performance as one of several ASIO accountability mechanisms, in turn part of minis-terial responsibility under the chosen Australian parliamentary model of human rights.
There are several pressing reform issues in the 2020 Guidelines, including: the need to improve consultative processes for review and development to match the expanding reach of ASIO security activities; the fact that the 2020 Guidelines authorise classified ASIO policies and thereby provide insufficient public guidance; and, the capacity of the 2020 Guidelines to interpretively enlarge the concept of relevance to security and, in particular, broaden the concept of politically motivated violence.
Further important issues and reforms arise from the treatment by the 2020 Guidelines of exiting or remediating the intelligence gathering process, including the collation and retention of personal information, as well a need to more clearly shape proportionality matters in familiar legal principles. Noticeable deficiencies in the 2020 Guidelines give cause for concern and reflection. Specific and broader reforms to the processes generating, and the content informing, the Guidelines are canvassed throughout the article and in its conclusion. These reforms are intended to improve the presently understated function of the 2020 Guidelines as part of a more integrated and responsive ASIO accountability framework.
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Publication Open AccessReviewReview of 'Big Brother Australia's Growing Web of Surveillance' by Simon Davies (Sydney, Simon and Schuster, 1992) pp viii, 184In recent times, we have witnessed an ever increasing intrusion by government and corporations into the personal lives of all Australians. This trend has been accelerated by rapid developments in information technology and the economic imperatives of recession. Simon Davies' book is an attempt to identify these and other trends which are leading to the undermining of individual rights and privacy. His message is made all the more compelling in two respects. First, the silence and speed with which our liberties are falling prey to routine government surveillance. Secondly, the overwhelming failure of the law to develop effective privacy safeguards and remedies. These considerations threaten to transform the very nature of citizen and government relations in this country as the building blocks of social control are put in place.2286 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Open AccessReportSubmission to Inquiry into Australia’s Human Rights Framework : Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human RightsThis submission will have a particular focus on a matter noted in the PICHR Media Release of 22 March 2023, 'Inquiry into Australia's Human Rights Framework', namely 'whether existing mechanisms to protect human rights in the federal context are adequate and if improvements should be made, including ...to the remit of the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights'.
Additional brief contextual consideration will be given to the further noted matter 'whether the Australian Parliament should enact a federal Human Rights Act, and if so, what elements it should include (including by reference to the Australian Human Rights Commission's relevant Position Paper)'.
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Publication Open AccessReportSubmission to Parliamentary Joint Committee on Intelligence and Security Inquiry - Australian Security Intelligence Organisation Amendment Bill 2020 (Cth) (Submission 7)The Bill provides an extensive array of new powers for the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation, principally by extending ASIO questioning warrants beyond the present discrete circumstances ‘that the issuing authority is satisfied that there are reasonable grounds for believing that the warrant will substantially assist the collection of intelligence that is important in relation to a terrorism offence’ (ASIO Act s.34 E (1) (b)) to include the much broader subject matters of espionage,politically motivated violence and acts of foreign interference, whether directed from, or committed within, Australia or not (in the case of adult questioning warrants) and a matter that relates to the protection of, and of the people of, the Commonwealth and the several States and Territories from politically motivated violence, whether directed from, or committed within, Australia or not (in the case of minor questioning warrants)
In addition, the Bill provides for extensive warrantless, internal ASIO authorisation powers relating to the authorisation, installation, use and maintenance of tracking devices (any device capable of being used (whether alone or in conjunction with any other device) to track a person or an object. The proposed warrantless tracking device powers are at odds with the longstanding and ministerially accountable Attorney General’s warrants and warrant process applicable to the suite of secret and intrusive ASIO powers, such as telecommunications interceptions, premises searches, computer access warrants, other surveillance device warrants and inspection of postal and delivery articles warrants.1800 7 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Conference PublicationPublication We've been spying on you for decades: ASIO and the early Australian solidarity movement(Timor-Leste Studies Association, 2016); ;Durnan, DeborahBenedito da Silva, AnteroThis paper is a work-in-progress, based on research I began earlier this year (2015), when I was given access to some Australian intelligence service files on the early solidarity movement.1891 1