A world without privacy : what law can and should do?

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Where to find it

Law Library — 2nd Floor Collection (2nd floor)

Call Number
KF1262 .W67 2015
Status
Available

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Summary

Recent revelations about America's National Security Agency offer a stark reminder of the challenges posed by the rise of the digital age for American law. These challenges refigure the meaning of autonomy and the meaning of the word "social" in an age of new modalities of surveillance and social interaction, as well as new reproductive technologies and the biotechnology revolution. Each of these developments seems to portend a world without privacy, or at least a world in which the meaning of privacy is radically transformed, both as a legal idea and a lived reality. Each requires us to rethink the role that law can and should play in responding to today's threats to privacy. Can the law keep up with emerging threats to privacy? Can it provide effective protection against new forms of surveillance? This book offers some answers to these questions. It considers several different understandings of privacy and provides examples of legal responses to the threats to privacy associated with new modalities of surveillance, the rise of digital technology, the excesses of the Bush and Obama administrations, and the continuing war on terror.eillance, the rise of digital technology, the excesses of the Bush and Obama administrations, and the continuing war on terror.eillance, the rise of digital technology, the excesses of the Bush and Obama administrations, and the continuing war on terror.eillance, the rise of digital technology, the excesses of the Bush and Obama administrations, and the continuing war on terror.

Contents

  • 1 Four privacy myths Neil Richards
  • 2 The yes-men and The women men don't see Rebecca Tushnet
  • 3 Enough about me: why privacy is about power, not consent (or harm) Lisa M. Austin
  • 4 What¿s wrong with privacy protections? Provocations from a fifth columnist Kevin Haggerty
  • Afterword: responding to a world without privacy: on the potential merits of a comparative law perspective Ronald Krotoszynski

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