Privacy, according to Justice of the United States Supreme Court William 0. Douglas, involves the choice of the individual to disclose or to reveal what he believes, what he thinks, what he possesses. The individual, he believed, should have the freedom to select for himself the time and circumstances when he will share his secrets with others and decide the extent of that sharing. For the private manuscript repository the protection of an individual\u27s right to privacy, at least that of the donor, presents no insurmountable problems. Donors may simply purge files in advance of deposit or place certain restrictions on their disclosure
The familiar legend of privacy law holds that Samuel Warren and Louis Brandeis invented the right to...
Privacy became a public issue during the 1970s to an extent that was unprecedented in American histo...
In 1972, Washington State voters passed Initiative 276, the Public Disclosure Act, by a substantial ...
The central archival concern is the preservation of the record and access to that record. If archivi...
The entire dissertation/thesis text is included in the research.pdf file; the official abstract appe...
Previously, privacy rights had to be litigated under one of the four recognized tort claim of action...
A Right to Privacy for Modern Discovery Recently, the Supreme Court found that a person has a Fourth...
Technology has always presented itself as a problem for the court system. As the pace of technologic...
In this article, Professor Solove develops a theory to reconcile the tension between transparency an...
Privacy has long been a matter of particular concern in the minds of Americans. Indeed, privacy conc...
Although seventy-seven years have passed since its launching, the right of privacy is still in its i...
An awareness of relevant contemporary legal thought in the area of privacy is especially important t...
The problem of privacy today is no longer—if it ever was—a distinctly legal problem. On the contrary...
The U.S. government maintains a vast amount of personally-identifiable information on millions of Am...
This Note examines possible constitutional protections for the individual interest in restricting a ...
The familiar legend of privacy law holds that Samuel Warren and Louis Brandeis invented the right to...
Privacy became a public issue during the 1970s to an extent that was unprecedented in American histo...
In 1972, Washington State voters passed Initiative 276, the Public Disclosure Act, by a substantial ...
The central archival concern is the preservation of the record and access to that record. If archivi...
The entire dissertation/thesis text is included in the research.pdf file; the official abstract appe...
Previously, privacy rights had to be litigated under one of the four recognized tort claim of action...
A Right to Privacy for Modern Discovery Recently, the Supreme Court found that a person has a Fourth...
Technology has always presented itself as a problem for the court system. As the pace of technologic...
In this article, Professor Solove develops a theory to reconcile the tension between transparency an...
Privacy has long been a matter of particular concern in the minds of Americans. Indeed, privacy conc...
Although seventy-seven years have passed since its launching, the right of privacy is still in its i...
An awareness of relevant contemporary legal thought in the area of privacy is especially important t...
The problem of privacy today is no longer—if it ever was—a distinctly legal problem. On the contrary...
The U.S. government maintains a vast amount of personally-identifiable information on millions of Am...
This Note examines possible constitutional protections for the individual interest in restricting a ...
The familiar legend of privacy law holds that Samuel Warren and Louis Brandeis invented the right to...
Privacy became a public issue during the 1970s to an extent that was unprecedented in American histo...
In 1972, Washington State voters passed Initiative 276, the Public Disclosure Act, by a substantial ...