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  1. "Discipline and Punish.Michel Foucault - 1975 - Vintage Books.
    In the Middle Ages there were gaols and dungeons, but punishment was for the most part a spectacle. The economic changes and growing popular dissent of the 18th century made necessary a more systematic control over the individual members of society, and this in effect meant a change from punishment, which chastised the body, to reform, which touched the soul.
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  • Uneasy Access: Privacy for Women in a Free Society.Anita L. Allen - 1988 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    'Anita L. Allen breaks new ground...A stunning indictment of women's status in contemporary society, her book provides vital original scholarly research and insight.' |s-NEW DIRECTIONS FOR WOMEN.
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  • The limits of privacy.A. Etzioni - 1999 - Journal of Law Medicine and Ethics 27 (3):288-288.
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  • An ethics for the new surveillance (abstract).Gary T. Marx - 1998 - Acm Sigcas Computers and Society 28 (2):1.
    The Principles of Fair Information Practice are almost three decades old and need to be broadened to take account of new technologies for collecting personal information such as drug testing, video cameras, electronic location monitoring and the internet. I argue that the ethics of surveillance activity must be judged according to the means, the context and conditions of data collection and the uses/goals and suggest 29 questions related to this. The more one can answer these questions in a way that (...)
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  • The Twilight of Authority.Robert Nisbet - 1977 - Ethics 87 (3):276-278.
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  • Murky conceptual waters: The public and the private. [REVIEW]Gary T. Marx - 2001 - Ethics and Information Technology 3 (3):157-169.
    In discussions on the ethics of surveillanceand consequently surveillance policy, thepublic/private distinction is often implicitlyor explicitly invoked as a way to structure thediscussion and the arguments. In thesediscussions, the distinction public and private is often treated as a uni-dimensional,rigidly dichotomous and absolute, fixed anduniversal concept, whose meaning could bedetermined by the objective content of thebehavior. Nevertheless, if we take a closerlook at the distinction in diverse empiricalcontexts we find them to be more subtle,diffused and ambiguous than suggested. Thus,the paper argues (...)
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