Journal of Information, Law & Technology Privacy, Technology Law and Religions across Cultures 1

  • Technologies C
  • Law T
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Abstract

The freedom to receive and impart information, privacy and the freedom from discrimination on grounds of religious belief are universally recognised as fundamental human rights and, as such, also form part of the basic values of democratic societies. These rights have, in the main, only been adequately articulated and increasingly protected at the international level after the Second World War, relatively very late in more than seven thousand years of civilization In contrast, the values promoted by religions have often been recognised as such for millennia. Where do the values of privacy law and religions conflict and where do they converge, especially in a world where information technology is ubiquitous? The paper examines the debate over privacy from various perspectives, identifying those areas where religions appear to have confronted issues of human rights and where lawyers have been joined in the debate by philosophers within the rapidly developing field of information ethics. It concludes by listing a minimum ten areas where religions may possibly contribute to the intercultural debate on privacy in the Information Society.

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APA

Technologies, C., & Law, T. (2009). Journal of Information, Law & Technology Privacy, Technology Law and Religions across Cultures 1. Journal of Information, Law & Technology, 2009(1), 1–22. Retrieved from http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/law/elj/jilt/2009_1/cannataci

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