This article suggests a balancing test to determine which routine uses of information legitimately fall within the Privacy Act. Part I briefly examines the background of the Act, concentrating on the legislative history of the routine use exemption, and examining problems the exemption presents. Part II then proposes a balancing test, based on notice and need for data, as a means of ascertaining proper routine uses
Many of the major western democracies have enacted freedom of information legislation in recent year...
This Note argues that the recent judicial interpretations of the DPPA by the Supreme Court and the S...
The National Security Agency\u27s domestic surveillance program has parallels in the growth of disea...
This article suggests a balancing test to determine which routine uses of information legitimately f...
What kinds of health information should be reported to government for civil purposes? Several compet...
The federal privacy legislative scheme is composed of a fragmented patchwork of aging sector-specifi...
This article addresses health privacy in the broader context of other areas of recent privacy activi...
This Note, by modifying certain aspects of the reasonable expectation of privacy test, offers a theo...
In Part II, this article examines the justifications for implementing comprehensive national health ...
April 14, 2003, marked the beginning of a new era in America’s healthcare industry because access or...
The premise of this Article is that a new definition pertaining to an individual's right to be left ...
This article analyzes the Privacy Protection Act as a response to Zurcher. Part I discusses the Zurc...
Twenty years ago, President Clinton signed the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act o...
U.S. consumers have little actual control over how companies collect, use, and disclose their person...
Information privacy laws, also termed “ data protection” laws, regulate the collection, use, dissemi...
Many of the major western democracies have enacted freedom of information legislation in recent year...
This Note argues that the recent judicial interpretations of the DPPA by the Supreme Court and the S...
The National Security Agency\u27s domestic surveillance program has parallels in the growth of disea...
This article suggests a balancing test to determine which routine uses of information legitimately f...
What kinds of health information should be reported to government for civil purposes? Several compet...
The federal privacy legislative scheme is composed of a fragmented patchwork of aging sector-specifi...
This article addresses health privacy in the broader context of other areas of recent privacy activi...
This Note, by modifying certain aspects of the reasonable expectation of privacy test, offers a theo...
In Part II, this article examines the justifications for implementing comprehensive national health ...
April 14, 2003, marked the beginning of a new era in America’s healthcare industry because access or...
The premise of this Article is that a new definition pertaining to an individual's right to be left ...
This article analyzes the Privacy Protection Act as a response to Zurcher. Part I discusses the Zurc...
Twenty years ago, President Clinton signed the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act o...
U.S. consumers have little actual control over how companies collect, use, and disclose their person...
Information privacy laws, also termed “ data protection” laws, regulate the collection, use, dissemi...
Many of the major western democracies have enacted freedom of information legislation in recent year...
This Note argues that the recent judicial interpretations of the DPPA by the Supreme Court and the S...
The National Security Agency\u27s domestic surveillance program has parallels in the growth of disea...