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Offers a comprehensive investigation of privacy in the modern world
Explores core concepts of privacy as well as its application to important, everyday issues
Enables greater engagement with difficult questions about privacy
Offers a comprehensive investigation of privacy in the modern world Explores core concepts of privacy as well as its application to important, everyday issues Enables greater engagement with difficult questions about privacy
Auteur
Ann E. Cudd is Dean of the College of Arts & Sciences and Professor of Philosophy at Boston University. Her recent work concerns the moral value of capitalism, conceptions of domestic violence in international law, and the injustice of educational inequality. She is past president and founding member of the Society for Analytical Feminism and vice president and president-elect of the American section of the International Society for the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy (AMINTAPHIL).
Mark C. Navin is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Oakland University (Rochester, MI). His recent work concerns public health ethics, bioethics, and food justice. His book, Values and Vaccine Refusal: Hard Questions in Ethics, Epistemology and Health Care, was published by Routledge in 2016. He is the Executive Director of AMINTAPHIL.
Contenu
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. <p
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