On Privacy
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About The Book

<p>This book explores the Janus-faced features of privacy and looks at their implications for the control of personal information for sexual and reproductive freedom and for democratic politics. It asks what if anything is wrong with asking women to get licenses in order to have children given that pregnancy and childbirth can seriously damage your health. It considers whether employers should be able to monitor the friendships and financial affairs of employees and whether we are entitled to know whenever someone rich famous or powerful has cancer or an adulterous affair. It considers whether we are entitled to privacy in public and if so what this might mean for the use of CCTV cameras the treatment of the homeless and the provision of public facilities such as parks libraries and lavatories. </p><p>Above all the book seeks to understand whether and if so why privacy is valuable in a democratic society and what implications privacy has for the ways we see and treat each other. The ideas about privacy we have inherited from the past are marked by beliefs about what is desirable realistic and possible which predate democratic government and in some cases predate constitutional government as well. Hence this book argues although privacy is an important democratic value we can only realise that value if we use democratic ideas about the freedom equality security and rights of individuals to guide our understanding of privacy.</p>
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