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Full-Text Articles in Law
Thinking Clearly About Privacy, Thomas Huff
Thinking Clearly About Privacy, Thomas Huff
Washington Law Review
The purpose of this article is to offer a fresh assessment of the right of privacy. It begins with discussion of the privacy norm, drawing on our ordinary judgments and experiences to clarify and elaborate the interest persons have in privacy. It then reviews some of the Supreme Court's reasoning on privacy, explains the Court's confusions, and proposes a way that we and the Court might think more clearly about these difficult matters.
Eros, Civilization And The Burger Court, Thomas C. Grey
Eros, Civilization And The Burger Court, Thomas C. Grey
Law and Contemporary Problems
No abstract provided.
Intelligence Gathering And The Law: Conflict Or Compatibility? , Benjamin R. Civiletti
Intelligence Gathering And The Law: Conflict Or Compatibility? , Benjamin R. Civiletti
Fordham Law Review
No abstract provided.
Inmate Abortions--The Right To Government Funding Behind The Prison Gates, Anne T. Vitale
Inmate Abortions--The Right To Government Funding Behind The Prison Gates, Anne T. Vitale
Fordham Law Review
No abstract provided.
Inmate Abortions--The Right To Government Funding Behind The Prison Gates, Anne T. Vitale
Inmate Abortions--The Right To Government Funding Behind The Prison Gates, Anne T. Vitale
Fordham Law Review
No abstract provided.
Raiding The Confessional--The Use Of Income Tax Returns In Nontax Criminal Investigations, David E. Joyce
Raiding The Confessional--The Use Of Income Tax Returns In Nontax Criminal Investigations, David E. Joyce
Fordham Law Review
No abstract provided.
Federal Legislative Proposals For The Protection Of Privacy , Ludmila Kaniuga-Golad
Federal Legislative Proposals For The Protection Of Privacy , Ludmila Kaniuga-Golad
Fordham Urban Law Journal
Previously, privacy rights had to be litigated under one of the four recognized tort claim of actions. With the advent of the computer age, it was argued that new causes of actions should be created to supplement the individually recognized privacy rights of the people. At the time this article was written, several privacy related bills were before congress. The note examines the benefits of the bills proposed, and the (justified) failure of the proposals to consider a single federal information data bank due to its inability to safeguard privacy. It also synopsizes the Subcommittee on Constitutional Rights' findings on …