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Borderlines in Private Law

Edited by: William Day, Julius Grower
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Privacy in the Republic


ISBN13: 9780367529116
Published: July 2022
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Paperback
Price: £38.99



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This book rethinks the idea of privacy. It argues that a satisfactory account of privacy should not limit itself to identifying why privacy might be valuable. It also needs to attend to the further question of how it can be secured in those circumstances in which it proves to be valuable. Drawing on republican ideas about the relationship between freedom and self-government, the book asserts that privacy is valuable because it enables us to lead non-dominated lives. It prevents others from acquiring power to interfere in our choices –– to remove options that would otherwise be available to us, and to manipulate our decision-making. It further examines means through which citizens might exercise effective control over decisions and actions that effect their privacy and proposes a democratic theory of privacy.

With the emergence of the ‘surveillance state’, this volume will be indispensable for scholars, students and researchers in political theory, political philosophy, law, and human and civil rights. It will be of particular interest to policymakers, lawyers, and human rights activists.

Subjects:
Privacy and Confidentiality
Contents:
1. Privacy and Political Theory
2. Privacy and Non-Domination
3. Privacy and the Demands of Republican Social Justice
4. Democratising Privacy
5. A Republican Right to Privacy
6. Privacy, Civic Virtue, and Civil Society