Academic literature on the topic 'Right to privacy, family and home'

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Journal articles on the topic "Right to privacy, family and home"

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Bessant, Claire. "Protecting Victims of Domestic Violence—Have We Got the Balance Right?" Journal of Criminal Law 79, no. 2 (April 2015): 102–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0022018315574820.

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That states should act to prevent domestic violence and protect victims is clearly acknowledged in international law. Yet international law confirms also that victims, perpetrators and their families have rights to privacy, to a family life and to a home. The extent to which rights to respect for private and family life should be interfered with in order to protect victims remains in dispute. With the aim of improving the protection afforded to domestic violence victims in England and Wales, in 2011–2012 the police and courts piloted the use of two new short-term protective measures; domestic violence protection notices and orders. Between 2012 and 2013 the police also piloted the domestic violence disclosure scheme, which saw prospective victims provided with information about their partner’s previous violent behaviour. The disclosure scheme and the domestic violence protection orders and notices were rolled out nationally in March 2014. In this article, consideration is given to the impact these two initiatives will have on the privacy of victims and perpetrators, an issue not considered in government evaluations of the pilots. This article analyses whether the roll-out of these new initiatives is justified, given their potential for interference in private and family life.
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Esteban, Laura, Patricia Navas, Miguel Ángel Verdugo, and Víctor B. Arias. "Community Living, Intellectual Disability and Extensive Support Needs: A Rights-Based Approach to Assessment and Intervention." International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 6 (March 19, 2021): 3175. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18063175.

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People with intellectual disability (ID) and extensive support needs experience poorer quality of life than their peers whose disability is not as severe. Many of them live in residential settings that limit community participation and prevent them from exercising control over their lives. This work analyzes the extent to which professional practices are aimed at promoting the right to community living for people with ID and extensive support needs, as well as the rights that are particularly linked to it, such as the right to habilitation and rehabilitation and the right to privacy. A specific questionnaire was designed and administered to 729 adults with intellectual disability (M = 37.05; DT = 12.79) living in different settings (family home, residential facilities and group homes). Measurement and structural models were estimated using exploratory structural equation modeling. Results obtained reveal that people with extensive support needs receive less support in terms of guaranteeing their right to independent living and privacy, especially when they live in disability-related services. This study highlights the need to implement and monitor, using valid and reliable indicators, mesosystem strategies that guarantee the right to live and participate in the community, especially for individuals with ID and extensive support needs.
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Donders, Yvonne. "Protecting the Home and Adequate Housing." International Human Rights Law Review 5, no. 1 (July 15, 2016): 1–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22131035-00501002.

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Many Roma, gypsies and travellers live in caravans or trailers, sometimes in together trailer parks or camps. This article analyses how this specific lifestyle connected to their housing is protected under the various regimes and provisions of international human rights law. Home and adequate housing, as well as family life and private life, are clearly protected under international human rights law. Moreover, Roma, gypsies and travellers are considered vulnerable communities for whom special measures need to be taken. States are for instance obliged to take the specific cultural interests related to the housing of Roma, gypsies and travellers into account. Although there is no accepted right to be provided with a home of choice, these rights imply an obligation to provide suitable alternative housing in cases of forced removal and sufficient procedural guarantees. This article is based on an analysis of several provisions in international and European human rights treaties covering non-discrimination, housing, private life and family life, including their interpretation by treaty monitoring bodies.
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Vojvodić, Jovana. "Respect of the Article 8 of the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms in the recent case law of the European Court of Human Rights." Zbornik radova Pravnog fakulteta, Novi Sad 54, no. 4 (2020): 1533–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.5937/zrpfns54-28441.

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Private life, family life, home and correspondence represent some of the most intimate and significant aspects of human life. The focus of this paper is an analysis of the right to respect for private life, family life, home and correspondence, as the elements of the protection of the Article 8 of the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms. The analysis was primarily conducted through research and interpretation of the European Court of Human Rights recent case law, whereby, some of the cases of the highest importance as well as the case of the Republic of Serbia as a respondent state, were specially observed.
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Coulton, Nicholas. "God, the Bible and Human Rights." Ecclesiastical Law Journal 14, no. 2 (April 16, 2012): 275–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0956618x12000063.

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The spat at the 2011 Conservative Party conference between the Home Secretary and the Lord Chancellor showed how contentious human rights legislation remains. Although Theresa May portrayed the claimant as having won the Article 8 right to remain in Britain because of his relationship with his cat, the judge had simply accepted the cat as one piece of evidence that the claimant had a genuine family life with his partner. The Home Secretary's principal point was that the right to respect for private and family life under section 8.1 of the European Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (ECHR) should be read in conjunction with section 8.2, which adds that such rights should not be overridden except where it isnecessary in a democratic society in the interests of national security, public safety, or the economic well-being of the country, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others.
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Marchenko, Volodymyr V., Inna I. Kilimnik, and Alla V. Dombrovska. "IMPLEMENTATION OF DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES IN HUMAN RIGHTS TO HEALTHCARE." Wiadomości Lekarskie 73, no. 7 (2020): 1539–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.36740/wlek202007142.

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The aim: The aim of the study is to examine the blockchain technology in the field of healthcare, to analyze the principles of the European Convention on Human Rights regarding respect for private and family life, home and correspondence, to analyze the key positions of the European Court of Human Rights (hereinafter – ECHR) in the field of human rights to privacy, to analyze the European Union (hereinafter – EU) secondary legislation regarding the supply of medicines, prospects for the blockchain usage in order to protect human rights to privacy and improve the quality of medicines. Materials and methods: Scientific works that are devoted to the outspread of digital technologies in healthcare, the provisions of the European Convention on Human Rights, the ECHR’s practice on the protection of human rights to privacy, the provisions of the EU secondary legislation that regulate the supply of medicines are studied. The methodology of this article is based on comparative and legal analysis techniques and includes system-structural method, method of generalization, method of analysis and synthesis as well. Conclusions: The blockchain technology in medicine and pharmacology will increase the level of protection of human rights to healthcare quality.
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Khurmi, Sanjay, and Martin Curtice. "The supervised community treatment order and the Human Rights Act 1998." Advances in Psychiatric Treatment 16, no. 4 (July 2010): 263–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/apt.bp.109.007781.

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SummaryThe introduction of the supervised community treatment order (CTO) was a major and significant change to the Mental Health Act 1983 following the 2007 amendments to the Act. Owing to paternalistic aspects of psychiatry, such new legislation brings with it the potential to impinge on the human rights of patients. Any new legislation must be read and implemented to be compliant with the Human Rights Act 1998. Of all the articles comprising the Human Rights Act, Article 3 (the right to freedom from inhuman and degrading treatment), Article 5 (the right to liberty and security) and Article 8 (the right to respect for family and private life, home and correspondence) are of particular relevance to CTOs. We consider here the potential implications of the use of CTOs with regard to the Human Rights Act.
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Spencer, J. R. "English Criminal Procedure and the Human Rights Act 1998." Israel Law Review 33, no. 3 (1999): 664–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021223700016101.

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The European Convention on Human Rights is one of the manifestations of the Council of Europe, an organisation of European states founded in 1949 with the aim of strengthening the common democratic heritage. It is an international treaty which binds the contracting States to respect the list of human rights and freedoms it proclaims. An enforcement mechanism exists in the form of the European Court of Human Rights (in this paper called ‘the Strasbourg court’).In brief, these rights and freedoms are the right to life (art. 2); freedom from torture or inhuman and degrading treatment or punishment (art. 3); freedom from slavery or forced labour (art. 4); the right to liberty (art. 5); the right to a fair trial (art. 6); freedom from retrospective criminal laws (art. 7); the right to respect for private and family life, home and correspondence (art. 8); freedom of thought, conscience and religion (art. 9); freedom of expression (art. 10); freedom of peaceful assembly (art. 11); and the right to marry and found a family (art. 12). Over the years, this initial list of rights has been expanded by a series of additional Protocols — not all of which have been ratified by all the Member States. The First Protocol, which Britain has ratified, guarantees the right to peaceful enjoyment of possessions, education, and free elections.
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Ó Cathaoir, Katharina, and Ida Gundersby Rognlien. "The Rights of Elders in Ireland during COVID-19." European Journal of Health Law 28, no. 1 (January 4, 2021): 81–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15718093-bja10035.

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Abstract This article reflects on COVID-19 restrictions imposed on elders in Ireland through the lens of the right to private and family life (Article 8 ECHR), focusing on stay at home orders and recommendations advising elders to avoid social contact. Furthermore, we examine restrictions on visiting nursing homes given the high death toll in that setting. In our analysis, we zero in on the principles of foreseeability and proportionality, highlighting areas of concern and aspects that we submit should be considered in a proportionality assessment. Ultimately, we argue that it is a mistake to view the COVID-19 pandemic solely as an emergency. In this manner, the solutions suggested through the law – restrictions on movement and visitation bans – are too narrow and fail to address the underlying structures, such as, issues in the healthcare system, the limited home help for elderly and poor conditions in nursing homes.
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Mihelčić, Gabrijela, and Maša Marochini Zrinski. "Suživot negatorijske zaštite od imisija i prava na život u zdravoj životnoj sredini." Zbornik Pravnog fakulteta Sveučilišta u Rijeci 39, no. 1 (2018): 241–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.30925/zpfsr.39.1.8.

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The authors analyse the national protection from emissions, in the first place, a property law component of this regime. Domestic regulation of the protection of property rights from harassment was brought in the perspective of the protection that the European Court of Human Rights provides for the right to live in a healthy environment, primarily through the protection of rights under Art. 8 of the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (right to respect for private and family life and home). In the context of the latter, the authors have analysed the interpretative methods used by the European Court and explored the following features: the requirement that environmental and environmental impacts and disturbances violate the Convention right, that is, the existence of a specific Convention causal link; the category of minimum level of severity; oscillation of the "quantum" of minimum level of severity within conventional "fluctuations"; and the scope (and type) of protecting the right to live in a healthy environment through the paradigm of the positive / negative obligations of the Contracting States.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Right to privacy, family and home"

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Goldie, Cassandra Mary-Ellen Law Faculty of Law UNSW. "Living in public space: a human rights wasteland?" Publisher:University of New South Wales. Law, 2008. http://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/43103.

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This thesis investigates the extent to which human rights law may be used to challenge the forced eviction of people who live in public space under public space laws. The specific case study is the operation of Darwin City Council By-law 103, which bans camping, or adults sleeping in a public place between sunset and sunrise. The by-law is used to criminalise or forcibly evict people who live in public space in Darwin in the Northern Territory. Darwin has the highest proportionate number of homeless people of any capital city in Australia. Indigenous people are significantly over-represented. The thesis charts recent legislative changes across Australia to demonstrate that public space laws, such as Darwin City Council By-law 103, continue to be popular public policy responses to law and order concerns. This legal regulation is being undertaken without ensuring compliance with international human rights standards. There has been a marked increase in Australia of the use of available domestic and international human rights tools to raise concerns about the enforcement of these laws against people living in public space. Through a review of secondary sources, the thesis establishes that some 15 human rights have been identified as potentially engaged by such enforcement but Australian jurisprudence has yet to emerge. The thesis selects the human right to privacy, family and home for detailed analysis. It interrogates available evidence from Darwin, international and comparative jurisprudence and secondary sources to determine whether the forced eviction of people living in public space under Darwin City Council By-law 103 may be found to violate the right to respect for privacy, family and home in a particular case. The study aims to make a specific contribution to growing endeavours to promote the human rights of people who are homeless, including people who live in public space. Its detailed analysis is designed to support a human rights litigation strategy at both domestic and international level, in order to challenge the extent to which people living in public space are subjected to criminalisation and forced eviction when they have nowhere else to live.
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Al-Rawashdeh, Sami H. "Is privacy brought home? : criminal justice and the right to privacy." Thesis, University of Aberdeen, 2003. http://digitool.abdn.ac.uk/R?func=search-advanced-go&find_code1=WSN&request1=AAIU176274.

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This thesis is concerned with protection of the right to privacy in the English and Scottish criminal justice systems. The aim of this research is to consider the extent to which privacy has been recognised in both criminal justice systems. It analyses the extent to which the right to privacy is protected by the substantive criminal law of those jurisdictions, as well as in their criminal procedural law. A part of the examination will address the question of whether there should be a criminal offence of violating the privacy of another. The thesis is mainly devoted to addressing whether the right to respect for private life has a place within criminal justice theory and practice. The protection of privacy in the criminal justice system is the predominant subject of this thesis for two main reasons. First, this is an important topic that has been neglected. Prior to this thesis no one had yet addressed this topic at any length as a distinct subject. The protection of privacy in the criminal justice system and the use of substantive criminal law to enforce the privacy rights of victims have received minimal attention in the English jurisprudence. No comprehensive legal and theoretical analysis of the topic could be found in English or Scottish law. Therefore, this topic was crying out for new insights and perspectives. Secondly, the Human Rights Act 1998 incorporates into the UK law certain rights and freedoms set out in the European Convention on Human Rights, including the right to respect for private life enshrined by Article 8. The aim of the Act is to "bring rights home" and give further effect to rights and freedoms guaranteed under the European Convention. The Act requires all public authorities to act in a way which is compatible with the Convention rights. Since the incorporation of the European Convention on Human Rights into United Kingdom law, it is particularly appropriate to ask whether English and Scottish criminal lawyers need to add privacy to their essential lexicon. The Human Rights Act 1998 could be expected to have a profound impact on the right to privacy within the criminal justice system. The European Convention obliges the Contracting States to bring their criminal justice systems into line with the European Convention requirements to protect the fundamental human rights in it. The thesis has the following objectives. First, to address the extent to which the right to privacy is protected by the substantive criminal law and whether privacy rights have been respected in criminal procedure laws. Secondly, to highlight the impact of the Human Rights Act of 1998 on the right to privacy in the criminal justice arena. This thesis shows that although right to privacy has been recognised by the European Convention and incorporated by the Human Rights Act 1998, the criminal justice systems in England and Scotland display little respect for privacy rights. In other words, this study has demonstrated that, as far as privacy is concerned, it is misleading and inaccurate to say that rights have been brought home.
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Wilson, Kevin G. 1952. "The social significance of home networking : public surveillance and social management." Thesis, McGill University, 1985. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=72035.

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This thesis analyzes the social significance of the integration of the home into computer networks. The social significance of home networking is grasped when these systems are understood in their relationship to emerging forms of electronic social control. The thesis establishes this connection through an analysis of structural trends in the videotex industry which demonstrates the value to the corporate sector of cybernetic information generated by interactive systems. The North American tradition of privacy policy is reviewed and demonstrated as inadequate for the protection of personal privacy in home networking. It is further shown that privacy policy does not represent an adequate theorization of social control in computer networking, since it does not account for practices of aggregate social control, which have been termed in the thesis "social management," so vital to the cybernetic economy of late capitalism. Finally, the thesis argues that current conceptual frameworks and policy mechanisms cannot assure the socially beneficial development of home networking, given the tendency towards the integration of such systems into structures of social control.
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Elliott, Anne A. "Rights in Conflict: Freedom of Information versus the Family Education Rights and Privacy Act." Ohio University Honors Tutorial College / OhioLINK, 2012. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ouhonors1341505659.

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Sparrow, Alice Pickett 1939. "THE SOCIOLOGICAL IMPACT OF THE FAMILY EDUCATIONAL RIGHTS AND PRIVACY ACT ON AN INSTITUTION OF HIGHER EDUCATION." Thesis, The University of Arizona, 1985. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/275273.

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Legendre, Rebecca. "Droits fondamentaux et droit international privé : Réflexion en matière personnelle et familiale." Thesis, Paris 2, 2018. http://www.theses.fr/2018PA020074.

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Le droit international privé est éprouvé par les droits fondamentaux. Les données à partir desquelles la discipline a été pensée ont d’abord évolué. Les droits de l’homme créent une connexion entre les ordres juridiques étatiques et protègent la mobilité internationale des personnes. Si cette évolution ne remet pas en cause l’existence du problème de droit international privé, force est d’admettre que les droits fondamentaux modifient aujourd’hui son analyse. Tandis que les conflits d’ordres juridiques sont transformés en conflit de valeurs, la hiérarchie des intérêts du droit international privé est remplacée par leur mise en balance. Les solutions de droit international privé sont, ainsi, perturbées par l’application contentieuse des droits fondamentaux. La proportionnalité est plus précisément à l’origine de cette perturbation. Technique de réalisation des droits de l’homme, la proportionnalité a une incidence inégale sur la discipline. Si le contrôle de proportionnalité épargne ses méthodes, il bouleverse en revanche ses solutions. Les Cours européennes ont tendance à privilégier la continuité des situations juridiques sur la défense de la cohésion interne. Aussi pressent-elles le droit international privé à libéraliser ses solutions. L’application contentieuse des droits fondamentaux doit, dès lors, être rationalisée pour préserver l’autorité et la prévisibilité des solutions du conflit de lois et de juridictions. C’est en dissociant l’application des droits de l’homme de l’exception d’ordre public international et en corrigeant la mise en œuvre du contrôle de proportionnalité que l’équilibre du droit international privé pourrait, nous semble-t-il, se reconstruire
Fundamental rights put private international law to the test. First, the context in which private international law operates has evolved. Fundamental rights have created a better, closer, intertwining of the separate state legal orders and have achieved a higher protection for the persons as they experience international mobility. If this evolution does not threaten, as such, the existence of private international law, it must be acknowledged that fundamental rights modify its analysis. Whereas the conflicts between legal orders are transformed into conflicts between values, the hierarchy of interests protected by private international law is replaced by a balancing of these interests. The solutions of private international law are thus disrupted by the enforcement of fundamental rights through litigation. Proportionality is at the source of this disruption. Being a case by case technique of enforcement of fundamental rights, the influence of the proportionality test on private international is uneven. If the proportionality test is found to be overall indifferent to the methods of private international law, its main impact is on the solutions of PIL. The European courts are indeed prone to favour the continuity in the legal situations of the persons, over the defence of the internal cohesion of the state legal orders. As a consequence, private international law is invited to reach liberal solutions. The enforcement of fundamental rights through litigation must hence be clarified so as to maintain a mesure of authority and predictability of the solutions of the rules of conflict of laws, international jurisdiction and recognition of foreign judgements. It is, on the one hand, by methodologically dissociating the enforcement of fundamental rights from the public policy exception and, on the other hand, through an amendment to the proportionality test, that the balance of private international may hopefully be restored
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Santos, Margarida Sequeira. "Incidências jus-laborais da maternidade." Master's thesis, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/10071/10430.

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Esta dissertação analisa o tema da proteção da maternidade na legislação laboral portuguesa. No Título I, dedicado à fase de acesso ao emprego e formação do contrato de trabalho, é estudado o regime legal de proteção da intimidade da vida privada da trabalhadora grávida, colocando em foco o reflexo que as ausências ao trabalho, por ocasião da maternidade, têm no plano da contratação de mulheres. Visa-se, por um lado, clarificar a definição dos limites ao poder de investigação do empregador em entrevistas de emprego em temas relacionados com a gravidez e as perspetivas futuras de constituir família e, por outro lado, refletir sobre a eventual existência de um dever de informação espontânea a cargo da candidata a emprego, um direito ao silêncio ou a, inclusivamente, mentir sobre esses assuntos. No Título II, em sede de execução do contrato de trabalho, abordamos o exercício do direito à dispensa para amamentação no contexto das dificuldades de conciliação entre a vida profissional e familiar. Procurámos fazer uma análise crítica ao atual quadro normativo e uma reflexão exaustiva sobre as condições práticas para o exercício pleno e efetivo deste direito, com especial enfâse na problemática dos meios de prova associados ao exercício deste direito e na definição clara e objetiva dos seus pressupostos, limites temporais e finalidade última de proteção da maternidade.
The present essay analyses the maternity protection in the context of the Portuguese labour legislation. In Title I, regarding the access to employment and the formation of the labour contract, it was analysed the legal framework concerning the right to privacy of the pregnant woman, focusing, in particular, on the consequences of the maternity leave and related absences from work in the context of hiring women. The essay, on the one hand, aims to clarify the definition of the boundaries and limits on the research and inquiry powers of the employers during the recruitment interviews, with regard to topics related with pregnancy or the prospective to raise a family and, on the other hand, to reflect about the spontaneous duty to disclose personal information, the right to silence or, even, the right to lie on pregnancy issues of woman seeking work. The Title II of this essay, regarding the period of execution of a labor contract, focus the topic of exercising the right to breastfeeding breaks, concerning the difficulties in reconciling work and family life. We aimed to do a critical analysis on the current legal framework and a rigorous reflection about the practical conditions to exercise effectively this right, focusing, particularly, on the topics regarding the forms of evidence when exercising the right to breastfeeding breaks and examining the objective and clear definitions of the assumptions, time limits and ultimate purpose of this special right regarding maternity protection.
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Books on the topic "Right to privacy, family and home"

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At home in the law: How the domestic violence revolution is transforming privacy. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2009.

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(Society), Justice. Memorandum to the Home Office Committee on Privacy. London: Justice, 1989.

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Institute, Pennsylvania Bar. Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act. [Mechanicsburg, Pa.]: Pennsylvania Bar Institute, 2010.

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Domestic violence and the politics of privacy. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2003.

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Porterfield, Jason. The Third Amendment: The right to privacy in the home. New York: Rosen Central, 2011.

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United States. Congress. House. Committee on Government Reform and Oversight. Family Privacy Protection Act of 1995: Report (to accompany H.R. 1271) (including cost estimate of the Congressional Budget Office). [Washington, D.C.?: U.S. G.P.O., 1995.

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Gloria, Armstrong, ed. Right at home: Family experiences for building literacy. Menlo Park, Calif: Addison-Wesley Pub. Co., 1993.

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Paging Dr. Right. Toronto, Ontario: Silhouette, 2007.

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Smith, Karen Rose. Her Mr. Right? Toronto, Ontario: Silhouette, 2008.

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Arnold, Judith. Right Place, Wrong Time. Toronto, Ontario: Harlequin, 2009.

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Book chapters on the topic "Right to privacy, family and home"

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Konrad, Marina, Sabine Koch-Sonneborn, and Christopher Lentzsch. "The Right to Privacy in Socio-Technical Smart Home Settings: Privacy Risks in Multi-Stakeholder Environments." In Communications in Computer and Information Science, 549–57. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-50732-9_71.

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Sen, Rukmini. "Right to Care, Home and Family: Ethics of Responsibility Towards Persons with Disability." In Dynamics of Asian Development, 65–75. New Delhi: Springer India, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-81-322-3595-8_4.

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Davies, Hayley, and Pia Christensen. "Sharing Spaces: Children and Young People Negotiating Intimate Relationships and Privacy in the Family Home." In Families, Intergenerationality, and Peer Group Relations, 27–49. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-287-026-1_28.

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Davies, Hayley, and Pia Christensen. "Sharing Spaces: Children and Young People Negotiating Intimate Relationships and Privacy in the Family Home." In Families, Intergenerationality, and Peer Group Relations, 1–23. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-4585-92-7_28-1.

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Dykstra, Pearl A., and Maja Djundeva. "Policies for Later-Life Families in a Comparative European Perspective." In The Palgrave Handbook of Family Policy, 331–67. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-54618-2_14.

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AbstractIn this chapter, we consider cross-national differences in policies for later-life families in Europe, focusing on state support freeing family members from caring responsibilities or enabling them to care. These policies come under the umbrella of long-term care (LTC), help required by persons with a reduced degree of functional capacity for an extended period of time. Publicly funded LTC includes “in-kind” services, where care is provided by professionals at home or in an institution, and “cash benefits” which can be used to purchase professional care or which can be paid to informal caregivers as income support. Apart from long-term care for dependents themselves, there are policies supporting family members in their caregiving tasks: “cash for care” (financial compensation for helping those with impairments), “care leaves” (the right to be absent from work in order to care), and “care credits” (time spent on caring that is credited towards a basic pension).
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Walden, Ian. "Communications Privacy." In Telecommunications Law and Regulation. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198807414.003.0018.

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The right to privacy of communications is one of the most enduring and widely recognized of the constellation of rights known as privacy law. While privacy remains a notoriously elusive concept, our communications activities have been consistently recognized as a fundamental element of our private life, placed side-by-side with notions of family and home. While the terminology used in international instruments and national constitutions may have evolved over time to reflect changing technologies, from ‘correspondence’ to ‘communications’, the centrality of communications privacy to our private life remains undisputed.
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Costigan, Ruth, and Richard Stone. "6. Article 8: Right to Respect for Private Life." In Civil Liberties & Human Rights. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/he/9780198744276.003.0006.

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Course-focused and comprehensive, the Textbook on series provide an accessible overview of the key areas on the law curriculum. This chapter examines Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), which protects the right to respect for a person’s private and family life, home, and correspondence. It begins by looking at some general issues, and then focuses on police powers of entry, search, and seizure; and the privacy rights of the individual as against the press.
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Fredman, Sandra. "The Right to Housing." In Comparative Human Rights Law, 265–304. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199689408.003.0009.

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Housing is frequently regarded as a matter for the political sphere, rather than a fundamental human right. At most, housing is seen as a socio-economic right, progressively realizable subject to available resources. By contrast, protection against State intrusion into home, family, or private life is widely accepted as a core human right. Section II contrasts jurisdictions which derive the right to housing from the right to life or the right to respect for home and family life, with jurisdictions with an express constitutional right to housing. Section III examines how the right to a home has been balanced against rights of property owners. This section considers both procedural protections, such as the right to be heard, and substantive protections such as provision of alternative housing. Section IV assesses how courts have approached the substance of the right, and the challenge of defining ‘adequate’ housing. This entails an examination of how courts deal with polycentric issues. Section V considers housing as an equality right.
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"The right to private life, family life, and the home." In Law & Public Dimension of Health, 336–42. Routledge-Cavendish, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781843143147-40.

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Lock, Tobias. "Article 7 CFR." In The EU Treaties and the Charter of Fundamental Rights. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198759393.003.527.

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Conference papers on the topic "Right to privacy, family and home"

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Mitrović, Ljubinko, and Predrag Raosavljević. "HUMAN RIGHTS OMBUDSMEN IN THE PANDEMIC: CHALLENGES IN PROTECTION OF VULNERABLE GROUPS." In EU 2021 – The future of the EU in and after the pandemic. Faculty of Law, Josip Juraj Strossmayer University of Osijek, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.25234/eclic/18353.

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Pandemic of virus COVID-19 posed numerous and unprecedented challenges to citizens and authorities which required shift in behavior and actions of all segments of society. Representing Ombudsmen Institution of Bosnia and Herzegovina, authors shared their experience in monitoring implementation of the decisions of all levels of government and presented challenges in striking the right balance between interests of public health and protection of rights of vulnerable groups. Public authorities in Bosnia and Herzegovina have passed emergency measures aimed at containing the spread of virus, but some of them failed to maintain human rights standards. Following the decisions of crisis centers to limit the freedom of movement, it was necessary to secure rights of children to education, protection from domestic violence and neglect in the family context. In introducing online education, authorities were asked to adapt recognition and grading system to the children in different conditions and circumstances, especially to the children with difficulties in development, children living in poverty and on margins of society such as Roma children or those living in institutions. Ombudsmen Institution registered increase in the number of domestic violence cases because measures limiting freedom of movement had impact on victims' ability to seek help from trusted sources, usually members of immediate family or representatives of law enforcement agencies. Having in mind that large number of citizens could not afford access to the official gazettes in any form, Ombudsmen requested that all enacted legislation be accessible online recommended that the decision banning reporters from conferences be reconsidered, guided by the right of citizens to be informed of their government actions. Examining the practice of placing COVID stickers on mail by the Post Office, Ombudsmen issued recommendation to stop such practice as it was deemed disproportional to the right to privacy and protection of personal data, while the protection of postal workers could have been ensured by other protective measures. It also became evident that national budgetary capacities had to be increased in order to prevent deterioration in provision of basic public services such as health and social protection, since economic consequences of the pandemic were disproportionally felt by the groups exposed to poverty, such as Roma, refugees or migrants. Drawing conclusion from concrete cases, authors offer review of particular emergency measures, analyze their adequacy, justifiability and timeliness, while presenting authorities’ response to Ombudsmen’s findings in formulating more adequate and efficient but, at the same time, least intrusive measures taken in response to the disaster. In search of common response to such widespread phenomenon, governments should recognize the intention of Ombudsmen Institutions to be in „permanent session“ over protection of vulnerable groups and should more actively involve it in discussions on emergency measures and their effect on human rights and freedoms. It proved to be better suited to act quickly, to apply more effective remedies and to correct government actions thanks to its knowledge of the local context than traditional institutions for protection of human rights, such as constitutional courts, international courts or treaty bodies.
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