The right to privacy and corporations


Autoria(s): Doyle, Carolyn; Bagaric, Mirko
Data(s)

01/08/2003

Resumo

Traditionally the right of privacy has not been recognised at common law. However, recently the High Court has indicated that it may be willing to develop a new tort of invasion of privacy. Several of the justices have stated that the new action would only relate to natural persons, not corporations. This is because the principles said to underpin the right to privacy, autonomy and dignity, are supposedly inapposite to corporations. This article argues that this reasoning is flawed. Neither the right to autonomy nor dignity is capable of underpinning the right to privacy. Hence, no sustainable basis has so far been advanced for restricting the availability of any future tort of invasion of privacy to individuals. This article also questions whether a separate tort is needed in view of the protection already provided to the privacy interests of individuals and corporations under the equitable doctrine of confidence.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30002189

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Lawbook Co

Relação

http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30002189/n20030883.pdf

http://legalonline.thomson.com.au/jour/resultDetailed.jsp?curRequestedHref=journals/ABLR/volumes/31/parts/4&contentSourceHref=journals/ABLR/volumes/31/parts/4/articles/237/fulltext&tocType=fullText&hitListPageContext=http://legalonline.thomson.com.au/jour/resultSummary.jsp?curRequestedHref=journals/ABLR/volumes/31/parts/4___tocType=fullText___sortBy=articleDate&searchId=11&hit=2&hits=7&articleType=fulltext&titleCode=Trtpac

Direitos

2003, Law Book Company

Tipo

Journal Article