Surveillance Technologies and Human Rights: Balancing Security and Freedom
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.66026/m13tpt71Keywords:
Surveillance, Human Rights, Privacy, Artificial Intelligence, National Security, Proportionality.Abstract
The rapid advancement of digital surveillance technologies has transformed the relationship between state security and the protection of individual rights. With the widespread use of biometric identification, artificial intelligence, and large-scale data analytics, surveillance has become a central feature of modern governance while simultaneously raising profound legal, and human rights challenges. This study investigates how surveillance practices intersect with the principles of privacy, freedom, and accountability enshrined in international instruments such as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR).
Using a qualitative and doctrinal research approach, the paper analyzes international treaties, academic works, and policy frameworks to assess how states justify and regulate surveillance in the name of national security. It adopts a comparative lens to examine variations in legal standards, oversight mechanisms, and accountability measures across jurisdictions. The research reveals a significant gap between rapid technological innovation and the development of effective legal safeguards, showing that many surveillance systems fail to meet the principles of legality, necessity, and proportionality mandated by human rights law.
The findings highlight that unchecked and opaque surveillance threatens democratic governance, weakens public trust, and risks normalizing intrusions on privacy. The study concludes that true security requires aligning surveillance practices with human rights norms through stronger legal regulation, ethical oversight, and global cooperation, ensuring that technology enhances—rather than endangers—human dignity and freedom.
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