Professor Chander's Securing Privacy in the Internet Age Published
Securing Privacy in the Internet Age, a cutting-edge analysis of Internet privacy and security issues co-edited by Professor Anupam Chander, has been published by Stanford University Press. The book brings together many of the world's leading academics, litigators, and public policy advocates to examine how privacy and security can be sustained in a world characterized by the ubiquitous flow of information. Professor Chander wrote the introductory chapter to the book.
"Although much has been written on privacy and security as they relate, separately, to information and to information technology, this anthology is the first extended treatment of the two factors combined, with articles by top legal scholars in both fields," wrote Helen Nissenbaum of New York University.
Professor Chander co-edited the book with Lauren Gelman, executive director of the Center for Internet and Society and lecturer with the Stanford Law School, and Margaret Jane Radin, professor of law at the University of Michigan Law School. The book is the first Stanford University Press book to bear a Creative Commons license.
Anupam Chander is a professor with the UC Davis School of Law and a leading scholar in the law of globalization and digitization.
The book is available for purchase through Amazon.com.
Securing Privacy in the Digital Age