Section One: Conceptualization and Categories
- Samuel Warren and Louis Brandeis, “The Right to Privacy” Harvard Law Review, Vol. IV December 15, 1890, No. 5
- Alan Westin, Privacy and Freedom, chs 1-3(?)
- Richard Posner, 1978. “The Right of Privacy,” Georgia Law Review, Spring 1978 Vol 12, No. 3.
- Ruth Gavison , “Privacy and the Limits of Law” The Yale Law Journal, Volume 89, Number 3, 1980
- Priscilla Regan, Legislating Privacy: Technology, Social Values and Public Policy (1995), Ch. 8. “Privacy and the Common Good.”
- Helen Nissenbaum, “Privacy as Contextual Integrity,” Washington Law Review Vol 79, No. 1, February 2004: 119-158.
- Spiros Simitis, “Reviewing Privacy in the Information Society,” 1987. University of Pennsylvania Law Review 135: 707-46.
- Daniel Solove, “A Taxonomy of Privacy,” University of Pennsylvania Law Review, Vol. 154, No. 3, p. 477, January 2006
Section Two: Approaches, Regimes, and Instruments
- Rule and Hunter, “Towards Property Rights in Personal Information,” in Bennett and Grant, Visions of Privacy, 1999.
- Ian Kerr, “Emanations, Snoop Dogs and Reasonable Expectations of Privacy,” Criminal Law Quarterly.
- US Supreme Court: Kyllo v. United States: 533 U.S. 27 (2001)
- Bennett/Raab, The Governance of Privacy ch. 8, 9, 10
- Charles Raab, “Co-Producing Data Protection,” International Review of Law, Computers and Technology (1997): 11:11-42
- David Chaum, “Achieving Electronic Privacy,” Scientific American 267: 96-101
- David Flaherty, “Controlling Surveillance: Can Privacy Protection be Made Effective,” in Agre and Rotenberg, Technology and Privacy: The New Landscape (MIT Press, 1997).
- David Flaherty, Protecting Privacy in Surveillance Societies, (1989), ch. 30
- Joel Reidenberg, “Lex Informatica: The Formulation of Information Policy Rules through Technology,” Texas Law Review Vol 76, No. 3. February 1998.
- Whitfield Diffie and Susan Landau, Privacy on the Line (2007 ed). Chs 1-3
Section Three: Critiques of Privacy
- Surveillance Society (Full Report) – Charles Raab has noted that Part D (on Regulation) is good for our reading group, and especially the longer section 45. The entire report is very good, and is worthwhile in its entirety, but focusing in the abovemented sections may be most profitable.
- Allen, Anita L. & Erin Mack. 1990. “How Privacy Got its Gender,” Northern Illinois University Law Review 10: 441-78 Allen
- K. Haggerty and R. Erickson, The New Politics of Surveillance and Visibility, ch. 1, (2006)
- G. Marx, “Ethics for the New Surveillance,” in Bennett and Grant (1999)
- D. Lyon, Surveillance Society, (2001), Part III.
- Felix Stalder, “Privacy is not the Antidote to Surveillance,” Surveillance and Society, Vol 1. no. 1.
- Michael Curry, “Rethinking Privacy in a Geo-Coded World, “ in Longley ed. Geographic Information Systems (1999).
- James Rule, Privacy in Peril (2007), Parts I and IV
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