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Instructor(s)

Bilder, Anne
Kastberg, Erin

Course Data

Room Remotely delivered: Synchronously
W 2:40pm-4:40pm

Pass/Fail: Yes

Course Description

This seminar-style course is about privacy --what it means to the courts, to the legislature, to the public, or whether it really means anything at all. Through a variety of source materials, including case law, legislation, essays, and literature, the course examines constitutional and common law approaches to privacy issues in many contexts -- our persons, our homes, our workplaces, our schools, our computers and cyberspace. It also includes cultural and comparative law dimensions of privacy. The instructors make a concerted effort to weave current events and "hot topics" in privacy into the syllabus and class discussions. Students are graded primarily on a final research paper, oral presentation of the paper in class, and on class participation. Pass/fail option is available.

Learning Outcomes – By the end of the course, students should have had the opportunity to engage in critical thinking about how the law reflects societal values about privacy in the following contexts:
1. Be familiar with the origins of U.S. privacy law;
2. Identify the four privacy torts;
3. Identify the privacy interests that are recognized and protected by the 4th Amendment;
4. Identify the privacy interests that are recognized and protected by the 1st Amendment;
5. Be familiar with how courts have applied the Constitution to decisions involving bodily integrity and medical decisions; and
6. Recognize and understand privacy implications in computing and on-line activities.

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