Available Formats
The Right to Privacy in Employment: A Comparative Analysis
By (Author) Dr Marta Otto
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
3rd November 2016
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Privacy law
Comparative law
344.0125
Hardback
256
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
535g
At the beginning of the twenty-first century the term privacy gained new prominence around the world, but in the legal arena it is still a concept in disarray. Enclosing it within legal frameworks seems to be a particularly difficult task in the employment context, where encroachments upon privacy are not only potentially more frequent, but also, and most importantly, qualitatively different from those taking place in other areas of modern society. This book suggests that these problems can only be addressed by the development of a holistic approach to its protection, an approach that addresses the issue of not only contemporary regulation but also the conceptualization, adjudication, and common (public) perception of employees privacy. The book draws on a comprehensive analysis of the conceptual as well as regulatory convergences and divergences between European, American and Canadian models of privacy protection, to reconsider the conceptual and normative foundations of the contemporary paradigm of employees privacy and to elucidate the pillars of a holistic approach to the protection of right to privacy in employment.
Marta Otto holds a PhD degree from the Department of Law of the European University Institute (Florence, Italy). She is a former scholar of the International Society for Labour Law and Social Security Law, COMPTRASEC (Centre de droit compar du travail et de la scurit sociale), and CRiMT (Centre de recherche interuniversitaire sur la mondialisation et le travail). Currently, she works as an Assistant Professor for Social Security Law and Social Policy, at the Faculty of Law and Administration, University of Lodz, Poland.