Rapid technological change, the advent of Big Data, and the creation of society-wide government surveillance programs have transformed the accessibility of highly personal information; these developments have highlighted the ambiguous treatment of privacy and personal intimacy. National legal systems vouchsafe and define privacy, and its first cousin dignity, in different ways that reflect local legal and cultural values. Yet, in an increasingly globalized world, purely local protection of privacy interests may prove insufficient to safeguard effectively fundamental autonomy interests - interests that lie at the core of self-definition, personal autonomy, and freedom. Privacy Revisited articulates the ...
The digital age sparked an explosion both in the quantity of private information that a government c...
Everyone has the right to demand respect for their privacy (private life). Hence, this right has bee...
The problem of privacy today is no longer—if it ever was—a distinctly legal problem. On the contrary...
Rapid technological change, the advent of Big Data, and the creation of society-wide government surv...
This book focuses on the right to privacy in the digital age with a view to see how it is implemente...
Reviewing: Ronald J. Krotoszynski, Jr., Privacy Revisited: A Global Perspective on the Right to Be L...
In both the United States and the nations of Western Europe, significant constitutional commitments ...
Privacy Revisited: A Global Perspective on the Right to Be Left Alone. By Ronald J. Krotoszynski , J...
Privacy is a Janus-faced value. It enables us to shut the world out, but the forms it takes and the...
Everybody wants privacy. Even though we are in the age of reality television and tell-all books, it ...
This article considers how existing literature on privacy recognizes, constructs and otherwise impli...
The right to privacy seems to occupy an entirely natural place within the structure of human rights;...
Privacy, while rarely a major social concern before 1900, has recently become a high profile issue, ...
This thesis explores the issue of how to reconcile the value of individual privacy with that of free...
The protection of universal principles varies across different jurisdictions: the prominence of dign...
The digital age sparked an explosion both in the quantity of private information that a government c...
Everyone has the right to demand respect for their privacy (private life). Hence, this right has bee...
The problem of privacy today is no longer—if it ever was—a distinctly legal problem. On the contrary...
Rapid technological change, the advent of Big Data, and the creation of society-wide government surv...
This book focuses on the right to privacy in the digital age with a view to see how it is implemente...
Reviewing: Ronald J. Krotoszynski, Jr., Privacy Revisited: A Global Perspective on the Right to Be L...
In both the United States and the nations of Western Europe, significant constitutional commitments ...
Privacy Revisited: A Global Perspective on the Right to Be Left Alone. By Ronald J. Krotoszynski , J...
Privacy is a Janus-faced value. It enables us to shut the world out, but the forms it takes and the...
Everybody wants privacy. Even though we are in the age of reality television and tell-all books, it ...
This article considers how existing literature on privacy recognizes, constructs and otherwise impli...
The right to privacy seems to occupy an entirely natural place within the structure of human rights;...
Privacy, while rarely a major social concern before 1900, has recently become a high profile issue, ...
This thesis explores the issue of how to reconcile the value of individual privacy with that of free...
The protection of universal principles varies across different jurisdictions: the prominence of dign...
The digital age sparked an explosion both in the quantity of private information that a government c...
Everyone has the right to demand respect for their privacy (private life). Hence, this right has bee...
The problem of privacy today is no longer—if it ever was—a distinctly legal problem. On the contrary...