Book Launch: Inception - State Surveillance from Postal Systems to Global Networks
10 June 2025, 5:30 pm

Event Information
Open to
- All
Organiser
-
UCL Laws Events
Location
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Gideon Schreier Lecture Theatre, UCL LawsBentham House, Endsleigh GardensLondonWC1H 0EG
Speakers
Speakers: Bernard Keenan (UCL)
Commentators: Daniella Lock (KCL) and Paul Scott (Glasgow)
Chair: Michael Veale (UCL)
About the book
A media history of how the UK and US governments have surveilled citizens by intercepting their private communications.
It may not be Big Brother (yet), but the state is watching you—watching all of us, in fact, systematically intercepting our private communications and putting them to work in its own interests. In Interception, a media genealogy of the surveillance state at its most intimate, Bernard Keenan investigates the emergence of this practice as a governmental power and the secret role it has played in the development of communication systems and law. His book exposes the complex, largely obscure history of a covert and fundamental connection between the secret powers of the state and the means by which we communicate our everyday lives.
Keenan analyzes key moments in this history, from the formation of the postal system to cable networks, satellites, and the internet, with particular attention to the role that media play in determining the political and legal conditions of the power of interception in governmental affairs. While chiefly focused on Britain, the Empire, and the post-1945 UKUSA signal intelligence alliance, the book's analysis has international reach across networks and jurisdictions, connecting Edward Snowden's disclosures and post-2013 developments to a longer media history, foregrounding the technical dimensions of an inherently secret practice and well-guarded political power. Ultimately, Keenan's work reveals how law and information systems have been interpolated over time, linking communication, governmental power, law, and information science—often to dark, antidemocratic ends.
Buy your copy at: https://mitpress.mit.edu/9780262552578/interception/
Schedule:
5:30 Registration
6:00 Event begins
7:30 Reception
- Praise for the book
An utterly fascinating and quietly devastating inquiry into the secret history of statecraft. Espionage, covert surveillance, wiretapping, general warrants and generalized skullduggery—all feature in Keenan's gripping narrative. Essential reading for anyone interested in the dark arts of the state.
~Thomas Poole, London School of Economics and Political ScienceKeenan's erumpent analysis shows how current media technologies outpace their legal regimes, offering a highly original historical perspective on the ecologies of power that are shaping modern surveillance.
~Peter Goodrich, Cardozo School of Law, Yeshiva UniversityKeenan’s compelling media archaeology bridges foundational problems in seventeenth-century sovereignty to twenty-first-century internet surveillance. It’s Vismann and Kittler for the twenty-first century!
~Bernard Geoghegan, King’s College London; author of Code: From Information Theory to French Theory