DiscoverDigital GovernanceWhat Do Privacy Scholars Maximize? – Law as a Practice and Law as a Science.
What Do Privacy Scholars Maximize? – Law as a Practice and Law as a Science.

What Do Privacy Scholars Maximize? – Law as a Practice and Law as a Science.

Update: 2025-08-22
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Ignacio Cofone’s book “The Privacy Fallacy” is the starting point for a methodological discussion about how the notion of privacy is approached by law. It is distinguished between law as a practice and law as science. The first is a technique of conflict resolution, while the latter derives empirically testable hypotheses from a theory. In “The Privacy Fallacy” we find both. Epistemological problems arise when the two approaches are not analytically separated. This discussion is guided by the article ‘What do privacy scholars maximize? – Law as a practice and law as a science’, written by prof. Heine.

For the link of the publication of the article mentioned above, please click here.

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What Do Privacy Scholars Maximize? – Law as a Practice and Law as a Science.

What Do Privacy Scholars Maximize? – Law as a Practice and Law as a Science.

Klaus Heine; Erasmus University Rotterdam