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49 Am. Crim. L. Rev. 1669 (2012)
Schools, Cyberbullies, and the Surveillance State

handle is hein.journals/amcrimlr49 and id is 1709 raw text is: ARTICLES
SCHOOLS, CYBERBULLIES, AND THE SURVEILLANCE STATE
Deborah Ahrens*
ABSTRACT
In recent years, parents, educators, and the media have expressed a rising
concern about the prevalence of bullying in American schools. In particular this
concern has been brought to the forefront with the emergence of cyberbullying
and sexting. In response to this perceived epidemic of poor student behavior,
legislatures and school officials have adopted a variety of new laws and search
policies. Most notably, they have adopted policies giving school officials the
authority to search students' electronic communication devices. This Article
narrates these developments, assesses their impact on the lives of students and the
culture of our schools and then locates them in broader trends in schooling,
parenting, and policing. More specifically, this Article explores the degree to which
our sharp spike in concern over traditional bullying, cyberbullying, and sexting,
and our resort to the surveillance of student devices as a response to such a
concern, reflects important lessons about our collective conception of student
privacy, about the expectations parents have of the role the school will play in their
children's lives, and about the transformation of public schools into public
institutions focused on criminal law and criminal-law-like approaches to per-
ceived social problems. When analyzed in cultural context, our schools' initial
response to concerns about cyberbullying and sexting is disquieting. Though
understandable-indeed even predictable-the approaches Americans have thus
far chosen do not reflect considered policy supported by empirical evidence, but,
rather, one more step in the reorientation of American institutions generally, and
public schools specifically, towards the reflexive adoption of surveillance and
punishment as the response to any potentially serious problem.
* Assistant Professor of Law, Seattle University School of Law. BA, Brown University; JD, New York
University School of Law; MPP, Harvard University. This paper was presented at the Annual Meeting of the Law
and Society Association in June of 2011. I would like to thank the commenters and co-panelists at that session; the
faculty at the University of Iowa College of Law for their feedback during their 2011-12 Faculty Speakers Series;
Robert Chang, for his review of this Article; my research assistants, Carrie Hobbs, Maria Leininger, and Brian
Fisher, for their many hours of capable work; and Christine Frausto, for alerting me to many of the developments
described in this Article. 0 2013, Deborah Ahrens.

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