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Full-Text Articles in Law
Sharenting: Children's Privacy In The Age Of Social Media, Stacey B. Steinberg
Sharenting: Children's Privacy In The Age Of Social Media, Stacey B. Steinberg
UF Law Faculty Publications
Through sharenting, or online sharing about parenting, parents now shape their children’s digital identity long before these young people open their first email. The disclosures parents make online are sure to follow their children into adulthood. Indeed, social media and blogging have dramatically changed the landscape facing today’s children as they come of age.
Children have an interest in privacy. Yet a parent’s right to control the upbringing of his or her children and a parent’s right to free speech may trump this interest. When parents share information about their children online, they do so without their children’s consent. These …
Your Right To Privacy And Children's Rights/Family Law: A Selective Bibliography, Sandra Klein
Your Right To Privacy And Children's Rights/Family Law: A Selective Bibliography, Sandra Klein
Sandra S. Klein
In a society increasingly aware of real or perceived social inequities, it is not surprising to note a greater concern for the rights of children and their families. It is also apparent that privacy issues are an integral subset of the larger social sphere of interests. Privacy aspects can be seen to be involved pervasively throughout the area of law dealing with children and families, especially in view of the fact that there is obvious potential for conflict not only between families and the state, but between children and the families of which they are a part
Your Right To Privacy And Children's Rights/Family Law: A Selective Bibliography, Sandra S. Klein
Your Right To Privacy And Children's Rights/Family Law: A Selective Bibliography, Sandra S. Klein
Journal Articles
In a society increasingly aware of real or perceived social inequities, it is not surprising to note a greater concern for the rights of children and their families. It is also apparent that privacy issues are an integral subset of the larger social sphere of interests. Privacy aspects can be seen to be involved pervasively throughout the area of law dealing with children and families, especially in view of the fact that there is obvious potential for conflict not only between families and the state, but between children and the families of which they are a part