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primers
This
part of the guide highlights writing about privacy. We've
selected books from our library because they've shaped
debate about privacy in cyberspace, they offer particular
insights, or are simply entertaining.
Principles
& Philosophies
Ferdinand Schoeman's Philosophical Dimensions of Privacy:
An Anthology (Cambridge: Cambridge Uni Press 84) and
Privacy & Social Freedom (New York: Cambridge
Uni Press 92) offer an introduction to the philosophy
of privacy in the West.
The Right to Privacy (Cambridge: Cambridge Uni
Press 00) edited by Ellen Paul & Fred Miller is an
uneven but valuable collection of recent essays about
principle, practice and legislation, complementing Privacy,
Intimacy, and Isolation (New York: Oxford Uni Press
92) by Julie Inness and Mary Ann Glendons Rights
Talk - The Impoverishment of Political Discourse (New
York: Free Press 91). Commanding Right & Forbidding
Wrong in Islamic Thought (Cambridge: Cambridge Uni
Press 01) by Michael Cook offers insights on privacy as
a key element of Islamic law.
Sisela Bok's Secrets: On the Ethics of Concealment
& Revelation (Oxford: Oxford Uni Press 85) and
Privacy & the Information Age (Lanham: Rowman
& Littlefield 01) by Serge Gutwirth are more accessible.
Oscar Gandy's The Panoptic Sort: A Political Economy
of Personal Information (Boulder: Westview 92) is
unfortunately out of print but more insightful than writing
by Michel Foucault and others of that ilk.
Other pointers to writing about privacy as a human right
are included in our Human Rights profile.
points of reference
There's an extensive literature from the 1970s onwards
regarding public versus private life and its implications.
For an introduction consult Public & Private in
Thought & Practice (Chicago: Uni of Chicago Press
97) edited by Jeff Weintraub & Krishan Kumar. The
five volume A History of Private Life (Cambridge:
Belknap Press 87-) under the general editorship of Philippe
Aries & Georges Duby is uneven but offers insights
into why privacy is contested. Patricia Boling's Privacy
& the Politics of Intimate Life (Ithaca: Cornell
Uni Press 96) is a provocative analysis of some feminist
positions.
Peter Ward's A History of Domestic Space: Privacy &
the Canadian Home (Vancouver: Uni of British Columbia
00) uses a smaller canvas but is strongly recommended.
Classics
& Commercials
Georg Simmel's 1908 'The Secret & The Secret Society'
is conveniently available in The Sociology of Georg
Simmel (New York: Free Press 85) translated by Kurt
Wolff. Vance Packard's The Naked Society (Harmondsworth:
Penguin 67) built on a long tradition of agitation about
privacy in the US.
Individual comments in what's become the Silent Spring
of the modern privacy movement have inevitably dated.
However, many of Packard's examples remain current. Particular
abuses from the early sixties are reflected in criticisms
by the US Federal Trade Commissioner and Communications
Commission in reports noted on the preceding page of this
guide.
For recent warnings of the 'death of privacy' consult
Simson Garfinkel's Database Nation: The Death of Privacy
in the 21st Century (Sebastopol: O'Reilly 00) and
the less measured The End of Privacy: How Total Surveillance
Is Becoming A Reality (New York: New Press 99) by
Reg Whitaker.
Erik Larson's The Naked Consumer: How Our Private
Lives Became Public Commodities (New York: Penguin
94) updates Packard.
Ellen Alderman & Caroline Kennedy The Right To
Privacy (New York: Knopf 95) uses a similar approach
in exploring the US Bill of Rights through a tour of workplace
privacy, bio-rights and police strip searches.
Jeffrey Rosen's The Unwanted Gaze: The Destruction
of Privacy in America (New York: Random 00) is another
philosophical treatment. It's built around an argument
that privacy's important because it protects us from being
judged out of context in a "world of short attention
spans" where isolated facts - or factoids - are mistaken
for genuine knowledge.
Barrington Moore Jr's Privacy: Studies in Social &
Cultural History (Armonk: Sharpe 84) is more insightful;
Robert Ellis Smith's Ben Franklin's Web Site: Privacy
& Curiosity From Plymouth Rock to the Internet
(Providence: Privacy Journal 00) is better on the US background.
Three masterful studies by Ithiel de Sola Pool are 'must
read': Technologies of Freedom: On Free Speech in an
Electronic Age (Cambridge: Harvard Uni Press 83),
Technologies Without Boundaries (Cambridge: Harvard
Uni Press 90) and the prescient Politics In Wired Nations
(New Brunswick: Transaction 98).
Simon Davies' Big Brother: Australia's Growing Web
of Surveillance (Sydney: Simon & Schuster 92)
is fashionably sensationalist. We consider that it lacks
depth and balance. Davies' Big Brother: Britain's Web
of Surveillance & the New Technological Order
(London: Pan 96) is less impressive.
regulatory
frameworks
Priscilla Regan's Legislating Privacy: Technology,
Social Values & Public Policy (Chapel Hill: Uni
of North Carolina Press 95) provides a useful introduction
to US legislative attempts to reconcile privacy and technology.
Her book is lucid and insightful, touching on questions
ranging from caller ID through to genetic testing.
We regard it as one of the major studies in the past two
decades.
Fred Cate's Privacy in the Information Age (Washington:
Brookings Institution 97) is shorter and more narrowly-focussed.
His argument against EU-style regulation has gained the
support of many US policy makers and business leaders.
A Canadian perspective is provided by the essays in Visions
of Privacy: Policy Choices for the Digital Age (Toronto:
Uni of Toronto Press 99) edited by Colin Bennett, whose
discussion
of the Canadian legislation in relation to international
developments we noted above.
Bennett's Regulating Privacy: Data Protection &
Public Policy in Europe & the United States (Ithaca:
Cornell Uni Press 92) is essential reading.
We mentioned the Electronic Privacy Information Centre
(EPIC)
above. Marc Rotenberg, its Director, along with
Philip Agre, edited the excellent essays in Technology
& Privacy: The New Landscape (Cambridge: MIT Press
97). They explore privacy-enhancing and privacy-eroding
technologies, philosophical issues, and legislative responses
in Europe and elsewhere.
High
Noon on the Electronic Frontier: Conceptual Issues In
Cyberspace (Cambridge: MIT Press 1996 and here)
edited by Peter Ludlow has chapters on privacy principles,
network practicalities (Enemy of the State style
surveillance is
still some way off, with apologies to Hollywood), workplace
privacy, data profiling in direct marketing, medical records
and why a positive approach to privacy by business makes
good sense.
Mark Stefik's The Internet Edge: Social, Technical
& Legal Challenges for a Networked World (Cambridge:
MIT Press 99) is characteristically thoughtful.
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