Privacy at the Margins

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AuthorScott Skinner-Thompson
Genrelegal scholarship
Published2020
Privacy at the Margins
cover of book
AuthorScott Skinner-Thompson
Subjectprivacy law
Genrelegal scholarship
Published2020
PublisherCambridge University Press
Awards2020 Gamm Justice Award
ISBN978-1-107-18137-3
OCLC1196819818

Privacy at the Margins is a book published by law professor Scott Skinner-Thompson on Cambridge University Press in 2020. The book contributes to a growing field of legal scholarship on privacy and inequality, especially for minorities,[1] and uses a queer and intersectional feminist epistemology to describe the effects privacy violations have on people living at the margins of society.[2]

Skinner-Thompson addresses the different ways privacy or the lack of privacy affects racial minorities, queer communities, women, people who are economically disadvantaged, and religious minorities.[1]:222–223 These minorities are both more likely to experience privacy invasions and the effects of such invasions are more devastating for them than for majority groups in society.[1]:223

Privacy at the Margins starts by stating that privacy is often not prioritised in courts of law or as a legislative priority, but it is extremely important for people in marginalized communities.[3]:1 The book aims to "provide solutions in the form of legal theories or frames for privacy that will better advance the privacy rights of marginalized communities in courts and society."[3]:1

The book aims to do this in three ways:

  1. By explaining how seemingly benign laws and norms violates the privacy of vulnerable groups causing disproportionate harm to them. An example is the targeting of minorities for surveillance."[3]:2
  2. By scrutinizing aspects of privacy law that cause this and analyzing how legal theories have not sufficiently considered the unequal effects of privacy.[3]:2–3
  3. By suggesting alternative legal theories and rhetorical frames for improving this.[3]:3

The book thus seeks to transform privacy "from a liberal, individualistic value into an anti-oppression legal tool."."[3]:1 The "secrecy paradigm" in US law presumes privacy to be irrelevant if your activities are exposed to anyone else, for instance if you walk out your front door, or have shared a photo with another person. This harms marginalized groups disproportionately because they are less likely to own their own spaces and more likely to be required to share personal information, for example due to targeted surveillance.[4]

Skinner-Thompson argues that in addition to seeing privacy rights protected by the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which prevents unreasonable searches, we should also see privacy as performative, as acts of expression. This would mean privacy was covered by the First Amendment, the right to free speech. Examples could include wearing hoodies or masks to avoid being surveilled (see anti-mask laws) as well as digital equivalents like using VPNs or the Tor network.[4] Case studies discussed include the Black Lives Matter movement.[5]:84

Jessica Silbey calls Privacy at the Margins a fourth-generation study on privacy law.[1]:221–222 The first generation established privacy as something to be protected. The second discussed its legal and constitutional variations, the third addressed the changing nature of privacy in the digital age.[1]:221 The fourth generation, according to Silbey, addresses privacy law and equality as it intersects with gender, race, sexual orientation and economic class.[1]:222

Author

Scott Skinner-Thompson is a professor of law at the University of Colorado Law School.[6] He began working on Privacy at the Margins while doing research for the American Civil Liberties Union on whether state constitutional privacy law could be used to challenge laws limiting peoples’ ability to change their gender markers on government identification documents.[7] This led him to consider how reduced privacy rights impacted many intersectional, marginalized groups.[7]

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