•  398
    Justifying Public Health Surveillance: Basic Interests, Unreasonable Exercise, and Privacy
    Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 22 (1): 1-33. 2012.
    Surveillance plays a crucial role in public health, and for obvious reasons conflicts with individual privacy. This paper argues that the predominant approach to the conflict is problematic, and then offers an alternative. It outlines a Basic Interests Approach to public health measures, and the Unreasonable Exercise Argument, which sets forth conditions under which individuals may justifiably exercise individual privacy claims that conflict with public health goals. The view articulated is comp…Read more
  •  41
    Medical privacy and the public's right to vote: What presidential candidates should disclose
    with Robert Streiffer and Julie R. Fagan
    Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 31 (4). 2006.
    We argue that while presidential candidates have the right to medical privacy, the public nature and importance of the presidency generates a moral requirement that candidates waive those rights in certain circumstances. Specifically, candidates are required to disclose information about medical conditions that are likely to seriously undermine their ability to fulfill what we call the "core functions" of the office of the presidency. This requirement exists because (1) people have the right to …Read more
  •  545
    Civil liberty and privacy advocates have criticized the USA PATRIOT Act (Act) on numerous grounds since it was passed in the wake of the World Trade Center attacks in 2001. Two of the primary targets of those criticisms are the Act’s sneak-and-peek search provision, which allows law enforcement agents to conduct searches without informing the search’s subjects, and the business records provision, which allows agents to secretly subpoena a variety of information – most notoriously, library borrow…Read more
  •  415
    The Particularized Judgment Account of Privacy
    Res Publica 17 (3): 275-290. 2011.
    Questions of privacy have become particularly salient in recent years due, in part, to information-gathering initiatives precipitated by the 2001 World Trade Center attacks, increasing power of surveillance and computing technologies, and massive data collection about individuals for commercial purposes. While privacy is not new to the philosophical and legal literature, there is much to say about the nature and value of privacy. My focus here is on the nature of informational privacy. I argue t…Read more
  •  22
    Local Trans Fat Bans and Consumer Autonomy
    American Journal of Bioethics 10 (3): 41-42. 2010.