Core Concepts and Contemporary Issues in Privacy

Bibliographic Details
Corporate Author: SpringerLink (Online service)
Other Authors: Cudd, Ann E. (Editor), Navin, Mark C. (Editor)
Summary:IX, 265 p.
text
Language:English
Published: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2018.
Edition:1st ed. 2018.
Series:AMINTAPHIL: The Philosophical Foundations of Law and Justice, 8
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-74639-5
Format: Electronic eBook
Table of Contents:
  • Ann E. Cudd and Mark C. Navin, Introduction: Conceptualizing Privacy Harms and Values
  • Part I Privacy: Core Concepts
  • 2. Judith Wagner DeCew, The Conceptual Coherence of Privacy as Developed in Law
  • 3. Alistair MacLeod, Privacy: Concept, Value, Right?
  • 4. Steven P. Lee, The Nature and Value of Privacy
  • 5. Mane Hajdin, Privacy and Responsibility
  • Part II Personal Information Privacy
  • 6. Pierre LeMorvan, Information, Privacy, and False Light
  • 7. Jonathan Schonsheck, The Unrelenting Darkness of False Light: A Sui Generis Tort
  • 8. Richard T. DeGeorge, Privacy, Public Space, and Personal Information
  • 9. Mark C. Navin, Privacy and Religious Exemptions
  • Part III Privacy and Technology
  • 10. Patrick Hubbard, The Need for Privacy Torts in an Era of Ubiquitous Disclosure and Surveillance
  • 11. Patrick O’Callaghan, The Chance ‘to Melt into the Shadows of Obscurity’: Developing a ‘Right to be Forgotten’ in the United States
  • 12. Renée N. Souris, Parents, Privacy, and Facebook: Legal and Social Responses to the Problem of 'Over-Sharing'
  • 13. Wade L. Robison, Digitizing Privacy
  • Part IV Privacy in Different Contexts: Work, Sex, Family, and Crime
  • 14. John G. Francis and Leslie P. Francis, Privacy, Employment, and Dignity
  • 15. Gordon A. Babst, Privacy and Outing
  • 16. Emily R. Gill, Marriage: Public Institution or Private Contract?
  • 17. Win-chiat Lee, Criminal Acts, Reasonable Expectation of Privacy and the Private/Public Split.