Megan Richardson 
The Right to Privacy 1914–1948 [PDF ebook] 
The Lost Years

Support

The book offers a provocative review of thinking about privacy and identity in the years encompassing and disrupted by the two world wars of the first half of the twentieth century – focusing (in particular) on the socio-technological transformations associated with modernism. It argues that, with many of the most interesting modern thinkers of the period dead or marginalised (or both) by 1948, their ideas about how rights such as privacy should develop to accommodate the exigencies of modern life failed to find much of a voice in the drafting of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Yet they anticipated in surprising ways some of our ‘new’ ways of thinking in more recent times. After a brief introduction, the chapters are framed in terms of case studies on the right to privacy, the right to data protection and the right to be forgotten, each finishing with a consideration of how these rights require further rethinking in the digital century.

 

 

€48.14
payment methods

Table of Content

Chapter 1. Introduction.- Chapter 2. Reimagining Privacy in the Face of Modernism.- Chapter 3. Asking for Data Rights in The Castle.- Chapter 4. Resisting Cinematographic Mechanism.- Chapter 5. Reappraisal.

About the author

Megan Richardson is a Professor in the Melbourne Law School at the University of Melbourne and author of The Right to Privacy: Origins and Influence of a Nineteenth-Century Idea (Cambridge University Press, 2017) and Advanced Introduction to Privacy Law (Edward Elgar, 2020).

Buy this ebook and get 1 more FREE!
Language English ● Format PDF ● Pages 55 ● ISBN 9789819944989 ● File size 2.0 MB ● Age 02-99 years ● Publisher Springer Nature Singapore ● City Singapore ● Country SG ● Published 2023 ● Downloadable 24 months ● Currency EUR ● ID 9107365 ● Copy protection Social DRM

More ebooks from the same author(s) / Editor

16,795 Ebooks in this category