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Rites of Privacy and the Privacy Trade
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Technological advances have made the right to privacy an important issue. Most discussions of privacy focus largely on methods and standards for the protection of specific privacy rights. In contra...
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11 January 2001

In Rites of Privacy and the Privacy Trade Neill constructs an original theory of natural rights and human dignity to ground our right to privacy, arguing that privacy and autonomy are innate natural properties metaphorically represented on the moral level and socially bestowed. She develops her position by drawing on works in history, sociology, metaphor, law, and the moral psychology of Lawrence Kohlberg. The resulting theory provides surprising answers to controversial and pressing questions regarding, for instance, our right to privacy for medical records in various contexts and in relation to various authority structures, including government. Neill demonstrates that, while we have some entitlement to protection of privacy, entitlement does not have the moral scope suggested by currently entrenched legal and social norms. She cautions against some of the privacy privileges we currently enjoy - referring specifically to claims such as those against insurance companies to prevent access to medical records - and suggests that if they are to be continued, respect for privacy is not the reason.
Price: $37.95
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Imprint: McGill-Queen's University Press
Publication Date:
11 January 2001
ISBN: 9780773568709
Format: eBook
BISACs:
POLITICAL SCIENCE / Civics & Citizenship, LAW / Privacy
"An original, interesting, and clearly written book of intelligence and imagination." Christine Sypnowich, Department of Philosophy, Queen's University "A serious advance in state-of-the-art research in the field. Neill addresses an important social and political issue, and, moreover, tries to draw practical implications from philosophical reflections." David Dyzenhaus, Faculty of Law and Department of Philosophy, University of Toronto
"An original, interesting, and clearly written book of intelligence and imagination." Christine Sypnowich, Department of Philosophy, Queen's University
"An original, interesting, and clearly written book of intelligence and imagination." Christine Sypnowich, Department of Philosophy, Queen's University