Rights of Privacy (book): Difference between revisions
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*'''Abstract''' | *'''Abstract''' | ||
'''Rights of Privacy''' is a research study on defining the scope and limits of the right to [[privacy]] with a comparative look from the perspective of international law and Islamic studies. The author, [[Baqer Ansari]], defines privacy as a domain of each individual's life where they expect others not to access information related to that domain without their consent. He considers the protection of individual freedoms and independence, the preservation of honor, and the innate human need for privacy as reasons for its necessity. | '''Rights of Privacy''' (in Persian: [[:fa:حقوق_حریم_خصوصی_(کتاب)|حقوق حریم خصوصی]]) is a research study on defining the scope and limits of the right to [[privacy]] with a comparative look from the perspective of international law and Islamic studies. The author, [[Baqer Ansari]], defines privacy as a domain of each individual's life where they expect others not to access information related to that domain without their consent. He considers the protection of individual freedoms and independence, the preservation of honor, and the innate human need for privacy as reasons for its necessity. | ||
The author identifies instances such as the prohibition of [[spying]] (tajassus), the prohibition of entering homes without permission, the sanctity of privacy from [[eavesdropping]] and voyeurism, the prohibition of suspicion, and the prohibition of [[spreading indecency]] as examples of the right to privacy that are emphasized in the Islamic legal system. Regarding the status of privacy in Iranian law, the author believes that in the Iranian legal system, privacy is not explicitly and formally protected; however, it is implicitly and within the context of other legal rules, albeit incompletely, protected. | The author identifies instances such as the prohibition of [[spying]] (tajassus), the prohibition of entering homes without permission, the sanctity of privacy from [[eavesdropping]] and voyeurism, the prohibition of suspicion, and the prohibition of [[spreading indecency]] as examples of the right to privacy that are emphasized in the Islamic legal system. Regarding the status of privacy in Iranian law, the author believes that in the Iranian legal system, privacy is not explicitly and formally protected; however, it is implicitly and within the context of other legal rules, albeit incompletely, protected. | ||