Privacy And Freedom

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Privacy and Freedom was originally published in 1967. Through his work--notably his book “Privacy and Freedom,”--Alan Westin was considered to have created the modern field of privacy law. This is a foundational work in the evolution of modern privacy law, and should appeal to academics, legal scholars and lay people alike. Can be compared to other best-selling foundational texts published by Ig, such as Bernay's Propaganda and Packard's Hidden Persuaders. Blurb to come from Jeffrey Rosen, president of the National Constitution Center and author of The Supreme Court: The Personalities and Rivalries that Defined America and The Naked Crowd: Reclaiming Security and Freedom in an Anxious Age. Introduction from Daniel Solove, Professor of Law at George Washington University and author of NOTHING TO HIDE: The False Tradeoff Between Privacy and Security Book will feature a brand new introduction written by Westin just before his death in 2013. The Washington Post in 2013 called it "The best book on privacy written in the late 20th century. Westin identifies four states of privacy: solitude, intimacy, reserve and anonymity....the book inspired many of the privacy reforms of the 1970s and 1980s--such as those championed by the Church Commission and enacted in the Foreign Intelligence Act ..." He was the most important scholar of privacy since Louis Brandeis."'Jeffrey Rosen In defining privacy as "the claim of individuals'to determine for themselves when, how and to what extent information about them is communicated," Alan Westin's 1967 classic Privacy and Freedom laid the philosophical groundwork for the current debates about technology and personal freedom, and is considered a foundational text in the field of privacy law. By arguing that citizens retained control over how their personal data was used, Westin redefined privacy as an individual freedom, taking Justice Louis Brandeis' 19th century definition of privacy as a legal right and expanding it for use in modern times. Westin's ideas transformed the meaning of privacy, leading to a spate of privacy laws in the 1970s, as well as prefiguring the arguments over privacy that have come to dominate the internet era. This all new edition of Privacy and Freedom features an introduction by Daniel J. Solove, John Marshall Harlan Research Professor of Law at the George Washington University Law School.

Author(s): Alan F. Westin
Publisher: Ig Publishing
Year: 2018

Language: English
Commentary: PDF Conv (Not TruePDF)
Pages: 366
Tags: Privacy, Right Of : United States, Law: Constitutional, Law: Public

Title Page......Page 3
Copyright......Page 4
Dedication......Page 5
The Legacy of Privacy and Freedom......Page 6
Foreword......Page 9
Acknowledgments......Page 16
Contents......Page 20
Prologue......Page 22
Part One: The Functions of Privacy and Surveillance in Society......Page 24
Chapter One: The Origins of Modern Claims to Privacy......Page 26
Chapter Two: Privacy in the Modern Democratic State......Page 35
Chapter Three: Intrusions on Privacy: Self-Revelation, Curiosity, and Surveillance......Page 52
Part Two: New Tools for Invading Privacy......Page 66
Chapter Four: The Listening and Watching Devices: New Techniques of Physical Surveillance......Page 69
Chapter Five: Private and Government Use of Physical Surveillance......Page 81
Chapter Six: Probing the Mind: Psychological Surveillance......Page 104
Chapter Seven: The Revolution in Information Collection and Processing: Data Surveillance......Page 119
Part Three: American Society’s Struggle for Controls: Five Case Studies......Page 132
Chapter Eight: Dissolving the Walls and Windows......Page 134
Chapter Nine: Truth Through Stress......Page 156
Chapter Ten: Prove That You’re Adjusted......Page 174
Chapter Eleven: Tampering with the Unconscious......Page 196
Chapter Twelve: Pulling All the Facts Together......Page 207
Part Four: Policy Choices for the 1970s......Page 224
Chapter Thirteen: Privacy and American Law......Page 225
Chapter Fourteen: Restoring the Balance of Privacy in America......Page 245
Notes......Page 266
Bibliography......Page 303
Index......Page 328