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Mary McThomas - The Dual System of Privacy Rights in the United States

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Mary McThomas The Dual System of Privacy Rights in the United States
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Theoretically, the right to privacy is an individuals right to space away from the public gaze to make life choices that are best for her or him, regardless of the beliefs of the majority. Yet the right to privacy in the United States has proven problematic for both political theorists and constitutional scholars, as it does not conform to theoretical conceptions of privacy or to existing theories of constitutional development.Mary McThomas provides a new model that helps us to think about both the right to privacy as well as constitutional development. She first divides privacy issues into two categories, and then illustrates how the two categories are treated differently. The first category, proprietary privacy, covers such issues as medical records and wiretapping. The second category, decisional privacy, involves making decisions about intimate matters such as the right to die, same-sex marriage, and abortion. McThomas tracks and assesses higher court cases in conversational privacy, representative of proprietary privacy, and court cases in marital privacy, representative of decisional privacy. She concludes that the most notable difference between the different types of privacy is that decisional privacy has evolved more slowly towards constitutionalization, and so is much more likely to be limited by community standards and social norms.This book brings the theoretical conceptions and the practice of privacy rights together, explaining what has happened in the area up until this point, and offering ways to predict how the courts will handle some of todays most contentious issues.

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The Dual System of Privacy Rights in the United States
Theoretically, the right to privacy is the quintessential right of the individual, allowing a person to make life choices that are best for her or him, regardless of the beliefs of the majority. Yet the right to privacy in the United States has proven problematic for both political theorists and constitutional scholars, as it does not conform to theoretical conceptions of privacy or to existing theories of constitutional development.
Mary McThomas provides a new model that helps us to think about both the right to privacy as well as constitutional development. She divides privacy issues into two categories, and then illustrates how the two categories are treated differently. The first category, proprietary privacy, covers such issues as medical records and wiretapping. The second category, decisional privacy, involves making decisions about intimate matters such as the right to die, same-sex marriage, and abortion. McThomas tracks and assesses higher court cases in conversational privacy, representative of proprietary privacy, and court cases in marital privacy, representative of decisional privacy. She concludes that different types of privacy are treated differently by the courts, resulting in a dual system of privacy in which decisional privacy rights are not equally protected for all individuals but instead are limited by community standards and social norms.
This book brings the theoretical conceptions and the practice of privacy rights together, explaining what has happened in the area up until this point, and offering ways to predict how the courts will handle some of today's most contentious issues.
Mary McThomas is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Mississippi State University. Her primary research interests include privacy, the role of individual rights and rights-claiming in a pluralistic society, immigration, and theories of citizenship.
Law, Courts and Politics
Edited by Robert M. Howard, Georgia State University
In Democracy in America, Alexis de Tocqueville famously noted that scarcely any political question arises in the United States that is not resolved, sooner or later, into a judicial question. The importance of courts in settling political questions in areas ranging from health care to immigration shows the continuing astuteness of de Tocqueville's observation. To understand how courts resolve these important questions, empirical analyses of law, courts and judges, and the politics and policy influence of law and courts have never been more salient or more essential.
Law, Courts and Politics was developed to analyze these critically important questions. This series presents empirically driven manuscripts in the broad field of judicial politics and public law by scholars in law and social science. It uses the most up-to-date scholarship and seeks an audience of students; academics; upper-division undergraduate and graduate courses in law, political science, and sociology; as well as anyone interested in learning more about law, courts, and politics.
1The Dual System of Privacy Rights in the United States
Mary McThomas
The Dual System of Privacy Rights in the United States
Mary McThomas
The Dual System of Privacy Rights in the United States - image 1
First published 2013
by Routledge
711 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10017
Simultaneously published in the UK
by Routledge
2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon, OX14 4RN
Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group,an informa business
2013 Taylor & Francis
The right of Mary McThomas to be identified as author of this work has been asserted by her in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers.
Trademark notice: Product or corporate names may be trademarks or registered trademarks, and are used only for identification and explanation without intent to infringe.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
McThomas, Mary.
The dual system of privacy rights in the United States / Mary McThomas.
p. cm. (Law, courts and politics, 1)
1. Privacy, Right ofUnited States. I. Title.
JC596.2.U5M38 2012
323.4480973dc23
2012037397
ISBN: 978-0-415-52710-1 (hbk)
ISBN: 978-0-203-06763-5 (ebk)
Typeset in Sabon
by Apex CoVantage, LLC
For Michael, partners for life
Contents
Series Foreword
As the editor of a new Routledge book series on Law, Courts and Politics, I am pleased to provide a short foreword to our initial contribution, The Dual System of Privacy Rights in the United States by Professor Mary McThomas. We envision this work by Professor McThomas to be the first in what we hope will be a long and intellectually rewarding series of books on the intersection of law, courts and politics. Our goal is to cover a range of important topics and issues with various methodological and analytic approaches.
There is significant scholarly and public interest in law and courts. For those who study and research in law and courts, there is a burgeoning and important empirical legal studies movement led by law professors applying social science methods to the study of law and courts. This movement, along with a new journal established by the Law and Courts section of the American Political Science Association, has led to many important new law-oriented journals and journal articles. These publications have added much to our understanding of this vital part of the political system.
In addition, after recent prominent decisions by the U.S. Supreme Court upholding the Affordable Health Care Act and striking down much of Arizona's immigration law, public awareness of courts and the importance of court decisions for politics and policy has never been greater. With greater awareness and interest, there is concomitantly a tremendous need for full-length, in-depth analyses of the actors, actions, issues and impacts of courts and the law. This is what we hope to accomplish in this series, and this first book provides an apt example of the benefits that a book-length examination provides.
The Dual System of Privacy Rights in the United States considers one of the most important concepts in American thoughtthe right to privacy. Professor McThomas does so by first developing a theory of what she defines as two different strands of privacy rights: decisional privacy rights and proprietary privacy rights. As Professor McThomas explains, proprietary privacy covers such issues as medical records, wiretapping and owning one's own image. Decisional privacy involves intimate matters and covers such issues as the right to die, same-sex marriage and abortion. She argues that these two categories are treated differently, giving greater or lesser protection to individuals based on the type of privacy involved.
She then follows this theory with two in-depth case studies of higher court treatment of these two categories. The first case study is of marital privacy, as an example of decisional privacy, whereas the second study is of conversational privacy, which she uses to examine proprietary privacy. Professor McThomas argues that the result of this dual system is that individuals are granted greater protection of their proprietary privacy rights than of their decisional privacy rights. She shows how this situation is out of step with our theoretical understandings of privacy and the protections the right is ideally expected to confer, equally and consistently, to each individual. We hope readers find this a thoughtful and thought-provoking work about privacy rights and how courts have defined these differing privacy rights.
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