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Protecting Personal Information : The Right to Privacy Reconsidered

SKU: 9781509924851
Regular price $99.00
Unit price
per
  • Author:
    MONTI Andrea / WACKS Raymond
  • ISBN:
    9781509924851
  • Publication Date:
    May 2019
  • Edition:
    1
  • Pages:
    192
  • Binding:
    Hardback
  • Publisher:
    Hart Publishing - Oxford
  • Country of Publication:
Protecting Personal Information : The Right to Privacy Reconsidered
Protecting Personal Information : The Right to Privacy Reconsidered

Protecting Personal Information : The Right to Privacy Reconsidered

SKU: 9781509924851
Regular price $99.00
Unit price
per
  • Author:
    MONTI Andrea / WACKS Raymond
  • ISBN:
    9781509924851
  • Publication Date:
    May 2019
  • Edition:
    1
  • Pages:
    192
  • Binding:
    Hardback
  • Publisher:
    Hart Publishing - Oxford
  • Country of Publication:

Description

The concept of privacy has long been confused and incoherent. The right to privacy has been applied promiscuously to an alarmingly wide-ranging assortment of issues including free speech, political consent, abortion, contraception, sexual preference, noise, discrimination, and pornography. The conventional definition of privacy, and attempts to evolve a 'privacy-as-a-fence' approach, are unable to deal effectively with the technological advances that have significantly altered the way information is collected, stored, and communicated. Social media such as Facebook pose searching questions about the use and protection of personal information and reveal the limits of conceiving the right to privacy as synonymous with data protection. The recent European Union's GDPR seeks to enforce greater protection of personal information, but the overlap with privacy has further obscured its core meaning. This book traces these troubling developments, and seeks to reveal the essential nature of privacy and, critically, what privacy is not.

Featured in the June 2019 Law newsletter.
To receive this newsletter regularly please email us with your name and contact details.

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  • The concept of privacy has long been confused and incoherent. The right to privacy has been applied promiscuously to an alarmingly wide-ranging assortment of issues including free speech, political consent, abortion, contraception, sexual preference, noise, discrimination, and pornography. The conventional definition of privacy, and attempts to evolve a 'privacy-as-a-fence' approach, are unable to deal effectively with the technological advances that have significantly altered the way information is collected, stored, and communicated. Social media such as Facebook pose searching questions about the use and protection of personal information and reveal the limits of conceiving the right to privacy as synonymous with data protection. The recent European Union's GDPR seeks to enforce greater protection of personal information, but the overlap with privacy has further obscured its core meaning. This book traces these troubling developments, and seeks to reveal the essential nature of privacy and, critically, what privacy is not.

    Featured in the June 2019 Law newsletter.
    To receive this newsletter regularly please email us with your name and contact details.

The concept of privacy has long been confused and incoherent. The right to privacy has been applied promiscuously to an alarmingly wide-ranging assortment of issues including free speech, political consent, abortion, contraception, sexual preference, noise, discrimination, and pornography. The conventional definition of privacy, and attempts to evolve a 'privacy-as-a-fence' approach, are unable to deal effectively with the technological advances that have significantly altered the way information is collected, stored, and communicated. Social media such as Facebook pose searching questions about the use and protection of personal information and reveal the limits of conceiving the right to privacy as synonymous with data protection. The recent European Union's GDPR seeks to enforce greater protection of personal information, but the overlap with privacy has further obscured its core meaning. This book traces these troubling developments, and seeks to reveal the essential nature of privacy and, critically, what privacy is not.

Featured in the June 2019 Law newsletter.
To receive this newsletter regularly please email us with your name and contact details.