Legal responses to the proliferation of surveillance technology demonstrate a notable but ultimately limited effectiveness, primarily because the recognised benefits for crime prevention are often prioritised over the necessary safeguards for individual privacy. The main argument for the effectiveness of the current legal position is that it facilitates substantial improvements in public safety and the investigation of crime. Surveillance technologies, such as CCTV and data monitoring, are permitted by law enforcement to gather evidence, identify offenders, and deter criminal activity, which positively contributes to national security and the management of public spaces. The legal framework supporting this is found centrally in the Human Rights Act 1998, which incorporates the European Convention on Human Rights. Specifically, while Article 8 guarantees a right to respect for private and family life, it is a qualified right which can be interfered with by the state where it is necessary and proportionate for a legitimate aim, such as ‘the prevention of disorder or crime’. This statutory provision directly supports the use of surveillance by making it lawful under certain conditions. The judiciary has affirmed this balancing act, for example in *R (Catt) v Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis* [2015] UKSC 9, the Supreme Court held that the police retaining data on an individual’s protest activities could be a proportionate interference with Article 8 rights, given its purpose in preventing future disorder. Using the evaluative criterion of **proportionality**, the legal system can therefore be judged as partially effective, as it provides a clear mechanism for state bodies to justify surveillance where it is deemed a proportionate response to the threat of crime, allowing for the protection of society. However, a significant counter-argument is that this legal response is ineffective at protecting citizens from the invasive potential of modern surveillance, which can lead to a chilling effect on freedom of expression and association. As technological capabilities advance, particularly with tools like live facial recognition, the law struggles to keep pace, creating regulatory gaps and a lack of clarity for citizens. This perspective is supported by the findings in *Big Brother Watch and Others v The United Kingdom* (2021) 73 EHRR 7, where the European Court of Human Rights ruled that the UK’s previous bulk data interception regime had insufficient safeguards and therefore violated Article 8. This case explicitly demonstrates that the existing legal framework was judged to be inadequate in providing protection against arbitrary interference by the state. Furthermore, the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO), the UK’s data protection regulator, has repeatedly expressed concerns that the use of live facial recognition technology in public spaces lacks a clear legal basis and risks creating a society where people are constantly monitored (ICO, 2019). When judged against the evaluative criteria of **legal certainty** and the **adequacy of safeguards**, the legal response is shown to be ineffective. The rapid, and often invisible, development of surveillance methods means that legislation is frequently reactive rather than preventative, leaving individual rights vulnerable. Ultimately, while legal responses have been effective in carving out justifications for surveillance in the name of public order, their overall effectiveness is critically undermined by a persistent failure to provide robust, pre-emptive safeguards against the ever-expanding reach of monitoring technologies.
References
- Big Brother Watch and Others v The United Kingdom (2021) 73 EHRR 7.
- Human Rights Act 1998, c. 42.
- Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO). (2019) Investigation into how the police use facial recognition technology in public places.
- R (on the application of Catt) v Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis and another [2015] UKSC 9.


