Heffernan, William C.
Privacy and the American Constitution
1. Introduction
William C. Heffernan
Part I. Moving from the Said to the Unsaid
2. Chapter 1: Constitutional Afterthoughts
William C. Heffernan
3. Chapter 2: The Right to Wear a Hat—and Other Afterthoughts
William C. Heffernan
4. Chapter 3: Developmental Supplementation
William C. Heffernan
Part II. A Genealogy of Constitutional Privacy Rights
5. Chapter 4: From Property to Privacy: The Eighteenth Century Background
William C. Heffernan
6. Chapter 5: The Emergence of Privacy Norms in Nineteenth Century America
William C. Heffernan
7. Chapter 6: The Nineteenth Century Court Reads the Eighteenth Century Text
William C. Heffernan
8. Chapter 7: From Thoughts and Beliefs to Emotions and Sensations: Brandeis on the Right to Be Let Alone
William C. Heffernan
9. Chapter 8: An Exercise in Supplementation That Failed: The Rise and Fall of Freedom of Contract
William C. Heffernan
Part III. The Modern System of Privacy Rights
10. Chapter 9: Ambitious Supplementation:
William C. Heffernan
11. Chapter 10: Unobtrusive Supplementation:
William C. Heffernan
12. Chapter 11: Informational Privacy Imperiled: Protecting Core Elements of Personal Control while Insuring Public Safety
William C. Heffernan
13. Chapter 12: Reappraising the Constitutional Past: Rights of Personal Autonomy
William C. Heffernan
14. Afterword
William C. Heffernan
Keywords: Criminology and Criminal Justice, Criminological Theory, Constitutional Law, Crime and Society, US History, US Politics
- Author(s)
- Heffernan, William C.
- Publisher
- Springer
- Publication year
- 2016
- Language
- en
- Edition
- 1
- Page amount
- 9 pages
- Category
- Upbringing, Education
- Format
- Ebook
- eISBN (PDF)
- 9783319431352
- Printed ISBN
- 978-3-319-43134-5