Please see below for leading privacy papers, and those listed as notable mention. Papers listed in alphabetical order. To view the “Privacy Papers for Policy Makers” journal, click here.
Leading Papers:
- Privacy on the Books and on the Ground
Kenneth Bamberger and Deirdre Mulligan - “Misplaced Confidences: Privacy and the Control Paradox”
Laura Brandimarte, Alessandro Acquisti and George Loewenstein - “What is Privacy Worth?”
Alessandro Acquisti, Leslie John and George Loewenstein - Standardizing Privacy Notices: An Online Study of the Nutrition Label Approach
Patrick Gage Kelley, Lucian Cesca, Joanna Bresee and Lorrie Faith Cranor - How Different are Young Adults from Older Adults When it Comes to Information Privacy Attitudes and Policies?
Chris Hoofnagle, Jennifer King, Su Li and Joseph Turow - Privacy and Regulatory Innovation: Moving Beyond Voluntary Codes
Ira Rubenstein
Notable Mentions:
- “Making Sense of Privacy and Publicity”
Danah Boyd - “The Boundaries of Privacy Harm”
M. Ryan Calo - Privacy by Design 7 Foundational Principles: Implementation and Mapping of Fair Information PracticesAnn Cavoukian
- “The Eavesdropping Employer: A Twenty-first Century Framework For Employee Monitoring”
Corey Ciocchetti - “The Deidentification Dilemma: A Legislative and Contractual Proposal”
Robert Gellman - “Sponsoring Trust in Tomorrow’s Technology: Towards a Global Digital Infrastructure Policy”
John Miller and David Hoffman - Preemption and Privacy
Paul Schwartz - “A Model Regime of Privacy Protection”
Daniel Solove and Chris Hoofnagle - “Americans Reject Tailored Advertising and Three Activities that Enable It”
Joseph Turow