Books

Cover of "Police Visibility" (book) Police Visibility: Privacy, Surveillance, and the False Promise of Body-Worn Cameras” (University of California Press, June 2021) [link].

  • Awarded the 2022 Surveillance Studies Network (SSN) Book Prize for outstanding monograph on surveillance published in 2021.
  • Read reviews by Skinner-Thompson (JOTWELL), Miranda (Information Polity), Tabor (Surveillance & Society), and Bohigian (Criminal Law and Criminal Justice Books).
Police on Camera: Surveillance, Privacy, and Accountability” (edited by Bryce Clayton Newell). Routledge: Routledge Studies in Surveillance book series, 2021) [link].
Surveillance, Privacy and Public Space” (edited by Bryce Clayton Newell, Tjerk Timan, and Bert-Jaap Koops). Routledge: Routledge Studies in Surveillance book series, 2019 [link].

  • Selected for “Notable Privacy & Security Books 2020,” PRIVACY + SECURITY BLOG (Daniel Solove) [link]
Privacy in Public Space: Conceptual and Regulatory Challenges” (edited by Tjerk Timan, Bryce Clayton Newell, and Bert-Jaap Koops). Edward Elgar Publishing, 2017 [link].

  • Reviewed in Laura Drechsler, European Data Protection Law Review 5 (1): 144–146 [link]
  • Reviewed in Jakub Míšek, Masaryk University Journal of Law and Technology 12 (1): 75–80 [link]

Special Issues/Section Editorials

Keith Spiller and Bryce Clayton Newell, eds. 2023. “Introduction: Surveillance in Conflict and Crisis.” Surveillance & Society 21 (1): 83–90 (editorial introduction to Dialogue section). [PDF]

Susan Cahill and Bryce Newell, eds. 2021. “Surveillance Stories: Imagining Surveillance Futures.” Surveillance & Society 19 (4): 412–413 (editorial introduction to special issue). [PDF]

Newell, Bryce Clayton, ed. 2021. “Introduction: Domestic Terrorism, White Supremacy, and State Surveillance.” Surveillance & Society 19 (3): 338–344 (editorial introduction to Dialogue section). [PDF]

Newell, Bryce Clayton, ed. 2020. “Introduction: Surveillance as Evidence.” Surveillance & Society 18 (3): 400–402 (editorial introduction to Dialogue section). [PDF]

Newell, Bryce Clayton, ed. 2020. “Introduction: The State of Sousveillance.” Surveillance & Society 18 (2): 257–261 (editorial introduction to Dialogue section). [PDF]

Newell, Bryce Clayton, ed. 2019. “Introduction: Decolonizing Surveillance Studies.” Surveillance & Society 17 (5): 714–716 (editorial introduction to Dialogue section). [PDF]

Sarah Brayne, Karen Levy, and Bryce Clayton Newell, eds. 2018. “Visual Data and the Law.” Law & Social Inquiry 43 (4): 1149–1163 (editorial introduction to special section; equal contributions). [link]

Randy K. Lippert and Bryce Clayton Newell. 2016. “Introduction: The Privacy and Surveillance Implications of Police Body Cameras.” Surveillance & Society 14 (1): 113–116 (editorial introduction to special section). [link, PDF]

Articles in Peer-Reviewed Journals and Law Reviews

Vincent Huynh-Watkins and Bryce Clayton Newell. “Abstracting Injustice.” Surveillance & Society (accepted and forthcoming).

Bryce Clayton Newell, Nadezhda Purtova, Young Eun Moon, and Hugh J. Paterson III. 2024. “Regulating the Data Market: The Material Scope of American Consumer Data Privacy Law.” University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law 45 (4): 1055–1143 [link]

Newell, Bryce Clayton and Marthinus C. Koen. 2023. “Painting the Narrative: Police Body-Worn Cameras, Report Writing, and the Techno-Regulation of Policework.” First Monday 28 (7). https://doi.org/10.5210/fm.v28i7.13243 [link]

Newell, Bryce Clayton. 2023. “Surveillance as Information Practice.” Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology 74 (4): 444–460. [link]

Koen, Marthinus C., Bryce Clayton Newell, and Melinda R. Roberts. 2023. “The Pennybridge Pioneers: Understanding Internal Stakeholder Perceptions of Body-Worn Camera Implementation.” Journal of Crime and Justice 46 (2): 194–210. [link]

Koen, Marthinus C., Bryce Clayton Newell, and Melinda R. Roberts. 2021. “Body-Worn Cameras: Technological Frames and Project Abandonment.” Journal of Criminal Justice 72 (1): 101773. [link]

Newell, Bryce Clayton, Sara Vannini, and Ricardo Gomez. 2020. “The Information Practices and Politics of Migrant-Aid Work in the US-Mexico Borderlands.” The Information Society 36 (4): 199–213. [link, PDF]

Vannini, Sara, Ricardo Gomez, and Bryce Clayton Newell. 2020. “‘Mind the Five’: Guidelines for Data Privacy and Security in Humanitarian Work with Undocumented Migrants and Other Vulnerable Populations.” Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology 71 (8): 927–938. [PDF; link]

Newell, Bryce Clayton, and Bert-Jaap Koops. 2020. “From Horseback to the Moon and Back: Comparative Limits on Police Searches of Smartphones upon Arrest.” Hastings Law Journal 72 (1): 229–290. [link, PDF]

Ivan Škorvánek [student], Bert-Jaap Koops, Bryce Clayton Newell, and Andrew Roberts. 2020. “’My Computer is My Castle’: New Privacy Frameworks to Regulate Police Hacking.” BYU Law Review 2019 (4): 997–1081. [PDF]

Ricardo Gomez, Bryce Clayton Newell, and Sara Vannini. 2020. “Mind the Five Card Game: Participatory Games to Strengthen Information Practices and Privacy Protections of Migrants.” The International Journal of Information, Diversity, & Inclusion (IJIDI) 4 (2): 116–122. [PDF]

Ricardo Gomez, Bryce Clayton Newell, and Sara Vannini. 2020. “Empathic Humanitarianism: Understanding the Motivations Behind Humanitarian Work with Migrants at the US-Mexico Border.” Journal on Migration and Human Security 8 (1): 1–13. [PDF; link]

Newell, Bryce Clayton. 2019. “Context, Visibility, and Control: Police Work and the Contested Objectivity of Bystander Video.” New Media & Society 21 (1): 60–76. [link]

Bert-Jaap Koops, Bryce Clayton Newell, and Ivan Škorvánek [student]. 2019. “Location Tracking by Police: The Regulation of ‘Tireless and Absolute Surveillance.’” UC Irvine Law Review 9 (3): 635–698. [PDF]

Bert-Jaap Koops, Bryce Clayton Newell, Andrew Roberts, Ivan Škorvánek [student], and Maša Galič [student]. 2018. “The Reasonableness of Remaining Unobserved: A Comparative Analysis of Visual Surveillance and Voyeurism in Criminal Law.” Law & Social Inquiry 43 (4): 1210–1235. [link]

Newell, Bryce Clayton, and Ruben Greidanus [student]. 2018. “Officer Discretion and the Choice to Record: Officer Attitudes Towards Body-Worn Camera Activation.” North Carolina Law Review 96 (5): 1525–1578. [link]

Newell, Bryce Clayton. 2018. “Privacy as Antipower: In Pursuit of Non-Domination.” European Data Protection Law Review 4 (1): 12–16 (invited “Foreword”). [link]

Newell, Bryce Clayton, Ricardo Gomez, and Verónica E. Guajardo [student]. 2017. “Sensors, Cameras, and the New ‘Normal’ in Clandestine Migration: How Undocumented Migrants Experience Surveillance at the U.S.-Mexico Border.” Surveillance & Society 15 (1): 21–41. [link]

Newell, Bryce Clayton. 2017. “Collateral Visibility: A Socio-Legal Study of Police Body Camera Adoption, Privacy, and Public Disclosure in Washington State.” Indiana Law Journal 92 (4): 1329–1399. [link]

Bert-Jaap Koops, Bryce Clayton Newell, Tjerk Timan, Ivan Škorvánek [student], Tomislav Chokrevski [student], and Maša Galič [student]. 2017. “A Typology of Privacy.” University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law 38 (2): 483–575. [PDF]

Newell, Bryce Clayton, Ricardo Gomez, and Verónica E. Guajardo [student]. 2016. “Information Seeking, Technology Use, and Vulnerability among Migrants at the U.S.-Mexico Border.” The Information Society 32 (3): 176–191. [link]

Newell, Bryce Clayton. 2014. “Technopolicing, Surveillance, and Citizen Oversight: A Neorepublican Theory of Liberty and Information Control.” Government Information Quarterly 31 (3): 421–431. [link]

Newell, Bryce Clayton. 2014. “The Massive Metadata Machine: Liberty, Power, and Secret Mass Surveillance in the U.S. and Europe.” I/S: A Journal of Law and Policy for the Information Society 10 (2): 481–522. [link, PDF]

Newell, Bryce Clayton. 2014. “Local Law Enforcement Jumps on the Big Data Bandwagon: Automated License Plate Recognition Systems, Information Privacy, and Access to Government Information.” Maine Law Review 66 (2): 397–435 (2014) [PDF]

Newell, Bryce Clayton. 2014. “Crossing Lenses: Policing’s New Visibility and the Role of ‘Smartphone Journalism’ as a Form of Freedom-Preserving Reciprocal Surveillance.” Journal of Law, Technology & Policy 2014 (1): 59–104. [PDF]

Newell, Bryce Clayton. 2011. “Rethinking Reasonable Expectations of Privacy in Online Social Networks.” Richmond Journal of Law & Technology 17 (4): art. 12. [PDF]

Newell, Bryce Clayton. 2011. “Freedom of Panorama: A Comparative Look at International Restrictions on Public Photography.” Creighton Law Review 44 (2): 405–428. [PDF]

Newell, Bryce Clayton. 2011. “Discounting the Sweat of the Brow: Converging International Standards for Electronic Database Protection.” Intellectual Property Law Bulletin 15 (2): 111–122. [link]

Newell, Bryce Clayton. 2010. “Independent Creation and Originality in the Age of Imitated Reality: A Comparative Analysis of Copyright and Database Protection for Digital Models of Real People.” BYU International Law & Management Review 6 (2): 93–126. [PDF]

Other Contributions to Journal Articles

Friedman, Batya, and Bryce Clayton Newell. 2021. “Tech Policy” section of the collaborative article: “Eight Grand Challenges for Value Sensitive Design from the 2016 Lorentz Workshop.” Ethics and Information Technology 23: 5–16 (credited co-author of the indicated section, which is part of a larger article). [link]

Book Chapters

Bryce Clayton Newell. Forthcoming. “Regulating Access: A Brief Overview of US Regulations on Access to Communications Data.” In Data Retention in Europe and Beyond: Law and Policy in the Aftermath of an Invalidated Directive, edited by Eleni Kosta and Irene Kamara. Oxford University Press.

Newell, Bryce Clayton, and Eleni Kosta. 2024. “Apples, Oranges, and Time Machines: Regulating Police Use of Body-Worn Cameras in Europe and the United States.” In Privacy, Technology, and the Criminal Process, edited by Andrew Roberts, Joe Purshouse, and Jason Bosland, pp. 196–221. Routledge. [link to book]

Farah Azhar [student], Sara Vannini, Bryce Clayton Newell, and Ricardo Gomez. 2021. “Navigating Borders/Navigating Networks: Migration, Technology and Social Capital.” In Research Handbook on International Migration and Digital Technology, edited by Marie McAuliffe, pp. 92–106. Edward Elgar Publishing. [PDF; link to book]

Newell, Bryce Clayton, Sylvia de Conca [student], and Kristen Thomasen. 2019. “Surveillance and Privacy in North American Public Spaces.” In Surveillance, Privacy, and Public Space, edited by Bryce Clayton Newell, Tjerk Timan, and Bert-Jaap Koops. Routledge, pp. 221–240.

Newell, Bryce Clayton. 2019. “Surveillance and Privacy in the Streets: An Introduction.” In Surveillance, Privacy and Public Space, edited by Bryce Clayton Newell, Tjerk Timan, and Bert-Jaap Koops Routledge, pp. 1–15 (introduction).

Tjerk Timan, Bryce Clayton Newell, and Bert-Jaap Koops. 2017. “Introduction: Conceptual Directions for Privacy in Public Space.” In Privacy in Public Space: Conceptual and Regulatory Challenges, edited by Tjerk Timan, Bryce Clayton Newell, and Bert-Jaap Koops. Edward Elgar Publishing, pp. 1–46 (introduction).

Newell, Bryce Clayton. 2016. “Mass Surveillance, Privacy, and Freedom: A Case for Public Access to Government Surveillance Information.” In Privacy, Security and Accountability: Ethics, Law, and Policy, edited by Adam D. Moore, pp. 203–222. Rowman & Littlefield International.

Newell, Bryce Clayton, Cheryl A. Metoyer, and Adam D. Moore. 2015. “Privacy in the Family.” In Social Dimensions of Privacy: Interdisciplinary Perspectives, edited by Beate Roessler and Dorota Mokrosinska, pp. 104–121. Cambridge University Press.

Peer-Reviewed, Archival Publications in Conference Proceedings

Sara Vannini, Ricardo Gomez, and Bryce Clayton Newell, “Drawing a Map in the Sand: Locating an Ethics of Care in the ICT-Related Migration Practices of Older Volunteers in the US Southwest.” In Proceedings of the 18th IFIP WG 9.4 International Conference (ICT4D 2024), Part II, edited by Wallace Chigona, Salah Kabanda, and Lisa F. Seymour, 205–220 (Cham: Springer) (2024) [PDF]

Newell, Bryce Clayton, “Interpreting Police Video: A Pilot Study.” In Proceedings of the Association for Information Science and Technology (ASIS&T)  58 (1): 499-503 (2021)

Sara Vannini, Ricardo Gomez, and Bryce Clayton Newell, “Documenting the Undocumented: Privacy and Security Guidelines for Humanitarian Work with Irregular Migrants.” In Proceedings of iConference 2019 (Information in Contemporary Society, edited by Natalie Greene Taylor, Caitlin Christian-Lamb, Michelle H. Martin, and Bonnie Nardi, 236–244 (Springer: Lecture Notes in Computer Science) (2019). [PDF]

Newell, Bryce C., and Ricardo Gomez, “Informal Networks, Phones and Facebook: Information Seeking and Technology Use by Undocumented Migrants at the U.S.-Mexico Border.” In Proceedings of iConference 2015 (2015). [PDF]

Katya Yefimova [student], Moriah Neils [student], Bryce Clayton Newell, and Ricardo Gomez, “Fotohistorias: Participatory Photography as a Methodology to Elicit the Life Experiences of Migrants.” In Proceedings of the 48th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS), 3672–3681 (2015). [PDF]

Franziska Roesner, Tamara Denning, Bryce Clayton Newell, Tadayoshi Kohno & Ryan Calo, “Augmented Reality: Hard Problems of Law and Policy.” In Proceedings (adjunct) of 2014 ACM International Joint Conference on Pervasive and Ubiquitous Computing (UbiComp), 1283–1288 (Workshop on Usable Privacy & Security for wearable and domestic ubIquitous DEvices (UPSIDE)) (2014)

Newell, Bryce Clayton, “Public Places, Private Lives: Balancing Privacy and Freedom of Expression in the United Kingdom.” In Proceedings of the Association for Information Science and Technology (ASIS&T), 51(1), 1–10 (2014)

Newell, Bryce Clayton, and Joseph T. Tennis, “Me, My Metadata, and the NSA: Privacy and Government Metadata Surveillance Programs.” In Proceedings of iConference 2014: 345–355 (2014)

David P. Randall and Bryce Clayton Newell, “The Panoptic Librarian: The Role of Video Surveillance in the Modern Public Library.” In Proceedings of iConference 2014: 508–521 (2014)

Newell, Bryce Clayton, and David P. Randall, “Video Surveillance in Public Libraries: a Case of Unintended Consequences?” In Proceedings of the 46th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS): 1932–1941 (2013)

Refereed Conference Posters

Sara Vannini, Ricardo Gomez, and Bryce Clayton Newell, “Privacy and Security Guidelines for Humanitarian Work with Irregular Migrants.” In Proceedings of the Tenth International Conference on Information and Communication Technologies and Development (ICTD X), Article No. 24 (2019) [PDF; link]

Newell, Bryce Clayton, Sara Vannini, Ricardo Gomez, and David Nemer, “Exacerbating the Vulnerabilities of Undocumented Migrants: The Risks Involved in the Humanitarian Information Activities of Migrant-Aid Organizations.” In Proceedings of iConference 2018 (2018). [PDF]

Newell, Bryce Clayton, “Context, Visibility, and Control: Contesting the Objectivity of Visual (Video) Records of Police-Citizen Interactions.” In Proceedings of the Association for Information Science and Technology (ASIS&T 2017) 54 (1): 766–767 (2017)

Research Reports / White Papers

Ryan Calo, Tamara Denning, Batya Friedman, Tadayoshi Kohno, Lassana Magassa, Emily McReynolds, Bryce Clayton Newell, Franzi Roesner, and Jesse Woo, “Augmented Reality: A Technology and Policy Primer” (Seattle, WA: UW Tech Policy Lab, 2015)

Encyclopedia Entries

Newell, Bryce Clayton, “Katz v. United States (1967).” In The SAGE Encyclopedia of Surveillance, Security, and Privacy, edited by Bruce A. Arrigo. SAGE (2018)

Newell, Bryce Clayton, “Kyllo v. United States (2001).” In The SAGE Encyclopedia of Surveillance, Security, and Privacy, edited by Bruce A. Arrigo. SAGE (2018)

Newell, Bryce Clayton, “European Convention on Human Rights.” In The SAGE Encyclopedia of Surveillance, Security, and Privacy, edited by Bruce A. Arrigo. SAGE (2018)

Dissertation

Newell, Bryce Clayton. 2015. “Transparent Lives and the Surveillance State: Policing, New Visibility, and Information Policy.” Doctoral thesis. University of Washington, Seattle, WA.