Beschreibung:
An interdisciplinary group of privacy scholars explores social meaning and value of privacy in new privacy-sensitive areas.
Introduction Dorota Mokrosinska and Beate Roessler; Part I. The Social Dimensions of Privacy: 1. Privacy: the longue durée James Rule; 2. Coming to terms: the kaleidoscope of privacy and surveillance Gary T. Marx; 3. Privacy and the common good: revisited Priscilla M. Regan; 4. The meaning and value of privacy Daniel J. Solove; Part II. Privacy: Practical Controversies: 5. The feminist critique of privacy - past arguments and new social understandings Judith Wagner DeCew; 6. Privacy in the family Bryce Clayton Newell, Cheryl Metoyer and Adam D. Moore; 7. How to do things with personal big biodata Koen Bruynseels and Jeroen van den Hoven; 8. Should personal data be a tradable good? On the moral limits of markets in privacy Beate Roessler; 9. Privacy, democracy, and freedom of expression Annabelle Lever; 10. How much privacy for public officials? Dorota Mokrosinska; 11. Privacy, surveillance and the democratic potential of the social web Colin J. Bennett, Adam Molnar and Christopher Parsons; Part III. Issues in Privacy Regulation: 12. The social value of privacy, the value of privacy to society and human rights discourse Kirsty Hughes; 13. Privacy, sociality, and the failure of regulation: lessons learned from young Canadians' online experiences Valerie Steeves; 14. Compliance-limited health privacy laws Anita L. Allen; 15. Respect for context as a benchmark for privacy online: what it is and isn't Helen Nissenbaum; 16. Privacy, technology, and regulation: why one size is unlikely to fit all Andreas Busch; 17. The value of privacy federalism Paul M. Schwartz.