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Privacy Rights : Moral and Legal Foundations Hardcover Adam D. Mo

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Former library book; may include library markings. Used book that is in excellent condition. May ... Ulteriori informazioniinformazioni sulla condizione
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Numero oggetto eBay:276403058035
Ultimo aggiornamento: 29 mag 2024 18:40:39 CESTVedi tutte le revisioniVedi tutte le revisioni

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Ottime condizioni
Libro che non sembra nuovo ed è già stato letto, ma è in condizioni eccellenti. Nessun danno evidente alla copertina, dotato di sovraccoperta(se applicabile) per le copertine rigide. Nessuna pagina mancante o danneggiata, piegata o strappata, nessuna sottolineatura/evidenziazione di testo né scritte ai margini. Potrebbe presentare minimi segni identificativi sulla copertina interna. Mostra piccolissimi segni di usura. Per maggiori dettagli e la descrizione di eventuali imperfezioni, consulta l'inserzione del venditore. Vedi tutte le definizioni delle condizioniviene aperta una nuova finestra o scheda
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“Former library book; may include library markings. Used book that is in excellent condition. May ...
Features
EX-LIBRARY
Book Title
Privacy Rights : Moral and Legal Foundations Hardcover Adam D. Mo
ISBN
9780271036854
Publication Year
2010
Type
Textbook
Format
Hardcover
Language
English
Publication Name
Privacy Rights : Moral and Legal Foundations
Item Height
0.9in
Author
Adam D. Moore
Item Length
9in
Publisher
Pennsylvania STATE University Press
Item Width
6in
Item Weight
18.1 Oz
Number of Pages
248 Pages

Informazioni su questo prodotto

Product Information

We all know that Google stores huge amounts of information about everyone who uses its search tools, that Amazon can recommend new books to us based on our past purchases, and that the U.S. government engaged in many data-mining activities during the Bush administration to acquire information about us, including involving telecommunications companies in monitoring our phone calls (currently the subject of a bill in Congress). Control over access to our bodies and to special places, like our homes, has traditionally been the focus of concerns about privacy, but access to information about us is raising new challenges for those anxious to protect our privacy. In Privacy Rights, Adam Moore adds informational privacy to physical and spatial privacy as fundamental to developing a general theory of privacy that is well grounded morally and legally.

Product Identifiers

Publisher
Pennsylvania STATE University Press
ISBN-10
0271036850
ISBN-13
9780271036854
eBay Product ID (ePID)
80556840

Product Key Features

Author
Adam D. Moore
Publication Name
Privacy Rights : Moral and Legal Foundations
Format
Hardcover
Language
English
Publication Year
2010
Type
Textbook
Number of Pages
248 Pages

Dimensions

Item Length
9in
Item Height
0.9in
Item Width
6in
Item Weight
18.1 Oz

Additional Product Features

Lc Classification Number
Kf1262.M66 2010
Reviews
&"Advocates of privacy should welcome Adam Moore&'s engaging defense of privacy rights, and in particular his iconoclastic challenge to the prevailing view that privacy is fine so long as it does not impinge on free speech. . . . [He provides] tools, in the form of principles, arguments, and examples, to help us rigorously put our intuitions about privacy to the test.&" &-Mark Tunick, Social Theory and Practice, "Privacy Rights is a significant contribution to the literature because it links the theory of privacy defended with other established views in the literature, but goes beyond that and adds new arguments and justifications. In the book, Adam Moore provides a novel endorsement of the value of privacy and privacy rights and a focus on contemporary issues surrounding informational privacy and the conflict between privacy and security, especially in the light of 9/11." --Judith Wagner DeCew, Clark University, &"Privacy Rights is a significant contribution to the literature because it links the theory of privacy defended with other established views in the literature, but goes beyond that and adds new arguments and justifications. In the book, Adam Moore provides a novel endorsement of the value of privacy and privacy rights and a focus on contemporary issues surrounding informational privacy and the conflict between privacy and security, especially in the light of 9/11.&" &-Judith Wagner DeCew, Clark University, "Advocates of privacy should welcome Adam Moore's engaging defense of privacy rights, and in particular his iconoclastic challenge to the prevailing view that privacy is fine so long as it does not impinge on free speech. . . . [He provides] tools, in the form of principles, arguments, and examples, to help us rigorously put our intuitions about privacy to the test." --Mark Tunick Social Theory and Practice, "In his Privacy Rights: Moral and Legal Foundations, Adam Moore has taken on the ambitious challenge of offering readers nothing less than 'a philosophical defense for privacy rights.' . . . Moore offers an analysis that should be of interest to scholars and students in a variety of academic disciplines as well as to participants in the public policy arena. . . . All readers--and potential readers--of Privacy Rights should applaud the contribution that the author has made to the hybrid literature on privacy, and his imaginative philosophical justifications for particular public policy positions." --John W. Johnson, Review of Politics, &"Adam Moore&'s Privacy Rights offers both a sustained philosophical analysis of the concept of privacy and a careful account of how this concept relates to such pressing practical issues as free speech, intellectual property, and workplace drug testing. This book is a first-rate piece of work and is destined to become a landmark volume in the philosophical discussion of privacy.&" &-James S. Taylor, The College of New Jersey, " Privacy Rights is a significant contribution to the literature because it links the theory of privacy defended with other established views in the literature, but goes beyond that and adds new arguments and justifications. In the book, Adam Moore provides a novel endorsement of the value of privacy and privacy rights and a focus on contemporary issues surrounding informational privacy and the conflict between privacy and security, especially in the light of 9/11." --Judith Wagner DeCew,Clark University, "Privacy Rights is a lucid and compelling examination of the right to privacy. Adam Moore provides a theoretically rich and trenchant account of how to reconcile privacy with competing interests such as free speech, workplace productivity, and security." --Daniel J. Solove, George Washington University Law School, author of Understanding Privacy, " Privacy Rights is a significant contribution to the literature because it links the theory of privacy defended with other established views in the literature, but goes beyond that and adds new arguments and justifications. In the book, Adam Moore provides a novel endorsement of the value of privacy and privacy rights and a focus on contemporary issues surrounding informational privacy and the conflict between privacy and security, especially in the light of 9/11." --Judith Wagner DeCew, Clark University, " Privacy Rights is a lucid and compelling examination of the right to privacy. Adam Moore provides a theoretically rich and trenchant account of how to reconcile privacy with competing interests such as free speech, workplace productivity, and security." --Daniel J. Solove,George Washington University Law School, author of Understanding Privacy, " Privacy Rights is a lucid and compelling examination of the right to privacy. Adam Moore provides a theoretically rich and trenchant account of how to reconcile privacy with competing interests such as free speech, workplace productivity, and security." --Daniel J. Solove, George Washington University Law School, author of Understanding Privacy, "Privacy Rights is a significant contribution to the literature because it links the theory of privacy defended with other established views in the literature, but goes beyond that and adds new arguments and justifications. In the book, Adam Moore provides a novel endorsement of the value of privacy and privacy rights and a focus on contemporary issues surrounding informational privacy and the conflict between privacy and security, especially in the light of 9/11." -Judith Wagner DeCew, Clark University, "Advocates of privacy should welcome Adam Moore's engaging defense of privacy rights, and in particular his iconoclastic challenge to the prevailing view that privacy is fine so long as it does not impinge on free speech. . . . [He provides] tools, in the form of principles, arguments, and examples, to help us rigorously put our intuitions about privacy to the test." -Mark Tunick, Social Theory and Practice, "Adam Moore's Privacy Rights offers both a sustained philosophical analysis of the concept of privacy and a careful account of how this concept relates to such pressing practical issues as free speech, intellectual property, and workplace drug testing. This book is a first-rate piece of work and is destined to become a landmark volume in the philosophical discussion of privacy." --James S. Taylor,The College of New Jersey, "In his Privacy Rights: Moral and Legal Foundations , Adam Moore has taken on the ambitious challenge of offering readers nothing less than 'a philosophical defense for privacy rights.' . . . Moore offers an analysis that should be of interest to scholars and students in a variety of academic disciplines as well as to participants in the public policy arena. . . . All readers--and potential readers--of Privacy Rights should applaud the contribution that the author has made to the hybrid literature on privacy, and his imaginative philosophical justifications for particular public policy positions." --John W. Johnson Review of Politics, "Adam Moore's Privacy Rights offers both a sustained philosophical analysis of the concept of privacy and a careful account of how this concept relates to such pressing practical issues as free speech, intellectual property, and workplace drug testing. This book is a first-rate piece of work and is destined to become a landmark volume in the philosophical discussion of privacy." -James S. Taylor, The College of New Jersey, "Privacy Rights is a lucid and compelling examination of the right to privacy. Adam Moore provides a theoretically rich and trenchant account of how to reconcile privacy with competing interests such as free speech, workplace productivity, and security." -Daniel J. Solove, George Washington University Law School, author of Understanding Privacy, &"In his Privacy Rights: Moral and Legal Foundations, Adam Moore has taken on the ambitious challenge of offering readers nothing less than 'a philosophical defense for privacy rights.&' . . . Moore offers an analysis that should be of interest to scholars and students in a variety of academic disciplines as well as to participants in the public policy arena. . . . All readers&-and potential readers&-of Privacy Rights should applaud the contribution that the author has made to the hybrid literature on privacy, and his imaginative philosophical justifications for particular public policy positions.&" &-John W. Johnson, Review of Politics, &"Privacy Rights is a lucid and compelling examination of the right to privacy. Adam Moore provides a theoretically rich and trenchant account of how to reconcile privacy with competing interests such as free speech, workplace productivity, and security.&" &-Daniel J. Solove, George Washington University Law School, author of Understanding Privacy, "In his Privacy Rights: Moral and Legal Foundations , Adam Moore has taken on the ambitious challenge of offering readers nothing less than 'a philosophical defense for privacy rights.' . . . Moore offers an analysis that should be of interest to scholars and students in a variety of academic disciplines as well as to participants in the public policy arena. . . . All readers-and potential readers-of Privacy Rights should applaud the contribution that the author has made to the hybrid literature on privacy, and his imaginative philosophical justifications for particular public policy positions." -John W. Johnson, Review of Politics, "Advocates of privacy should welcome Adam Moore's engaging defense of privacy rights, and in particular his iconoclastic challenge to the prevailing view that privacy is fine so long as it does not impinge on free speech. . . . [He provides] tools, in the form of principles, arguments, and examples, to help us rigorously put our intuitions about privacy to the test." --Mark Tunick, Social Theory and Practice, "Adam Moore's Privacy Rights offers both a sustained philosophical analysis of the concept of privacy and a careful account of how this concept relates to such pressing practical issues as free speech, intellectual property, and workplace drug testing. This book is a first-rate piece of work and is destined to become a landmark volume in the philosophical discussion of privacy." --James S. Taylor, The College of New Jersey, " Privacy Rights is a lucid and compelling examination of the right to privacy. Adam Moore provides a theoretically rich and trenchant account of how to reconcile privacy with competing interests such as free speech, workplace productivity, and security." -Daniel J. Solove, George Washington University Law School, author of Understanding Privacy, "In his Privacy Rights: Moral and Legal Foundations, Adam Moore has taken on the ambitious challenge of offering readers nothing less than 'a philosophical defense for privacy rights.' . . . Moore offers an analysis that should be of interest to scholars and students in a variety of academic disciplines as well as to participants in the public policy arena. . . . All readers-and potential readers-of Privacy Rights should applaud the contribution that the author has made to the hybrid literature on privacy, and his imaginative philosophical justifications for particular public policy positions." -John W. Johnson, Review of Politics, "In his Privacy Rights: Moral and Legal Foundations , Adam Moore has taken on the ambitious challenge of offering readers nothing less than 'a philosophical defense for privacy rights.' . . . Moore offers an analysis that should be of interest to scholars and students in a variety of academic disciplines as well as to participants in the public policy arena. . . . All readers--and potential readers--of Privacy Rights should applaud the contribution that the author has made to the hybrid literature on privacy, and his imaginative philosophical justifications for particular public policy positions." --John W. Johnson, Review of Politics, " Privacy Rights is a significant contribution to the literature because it links the theory of privacy defended with other established views in the literature, but goes beyond that and adds new arguments and justifications. In the book, Adam Moore provides a novel endorsement of the value of privacy and privacy rights and a focus on contemporary issues surrounding informational privacy and the conflict between privacy and security, especially in the light of 9/11." -Judith Wagner DeCew, Clark University
Copyright Date
2010
Topic
Privacy, Intellectual Property / General, Public Affairs & Administration, Ethics & Moral Philosophy, Civil Rights, Security / General, Political
Lccn
2009-053062
Dewey Decimal
342.730858
Intended Audience
Scholarly & Professional
Dewey Edition
22
Genre
Computers, Law, Philosophy, Political Science

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