The Right to Privacy Deconstructed: International Law in an Age of Virtual Surveillance
Analýza práva na ochranu soukromí: Mezinárodní právo v době virtuálního sledování
diploma thesis (DEFENDED)

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http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/90653Identifiers
Study Information System: 179977
CU Caralogue: 990021532170106986
Collections
- Kvalifikační práce [18445]
Author
Advisor
Referee
Pulgret, Miroslav
Faculty / Institute
Faculty of Social Sciences
Discipline
International Relations
Department
Department of International Relations
Date of defense
11. 9. 2017
Publisher
Univerzita Karlova, Fakulta sociálních vědLanguage
English
Grade
Good
Keywords (Czech)
Cyberspace, digital-age, virtual, surveillance, privacy, human rights, international lawKeywords (English)
Cyberspace, digital-age, virtual, surveillance, privacy, human rights, international lawBibliographic note: PRIJATEL, Alan J. The Right to Privacy Deconstructed: International Law in an Age of Virtual Surveillance, 72p. Master's Thesis. Univerzita Karlova (Charles University), Faculty of Social Sciences, Institute of Political Studies: Prague, Supervisor: JU. Dr Milan Lipovský, Ph.D. Abstract: In order to understand the process to which the right to privacy operates under current international and regional legal frameworks, we ask ourselves the question if "the digital age" merits an interpretation of privacy unique to this phenomenon of cyberspace. If indeed the right to privacy can be interpreted in this way, we ask whether or not there is a deficit to legal protections to the. This "right to privacy in the digital age" will be taken in context of international law, conventions, principles, and norms in addition to being explored in case-law from the European Court of Human Rights to draw an understanding of the right to privacy in the digital age- if any such right does indeed exist. This thesis essentially, as the title implies, "deconstructs" what puts together the right to privacy and examines what parts of the law that was intended to fortify privacy in the first place, has shortcomings to its defense. I am arguing that there indeed are normative deficits to the right to privacy. In...