The right to privacy

The right to privacy is enshrined in Article 12 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948):

No one shall be subjected to arbitrary interference with his privacy, family, home or correspondence, nor to attacks upon his honour and reputation. Everyone has the right to protection of the law against such interferences or attacks.

The right to privacy has not been clearly defined. It can be divided into separate, but often inter-related, concepts, most commonly:

  • bodily privacy: restriction of invasive physical activity, such as DNA collection and strip searches;

  • communications privacy: restriction of interference with mail, telephone and electronic communications;

  • territorial or spatial privacy: restriction on unwarranted intrusion into the home, workplace and streets through, for example, surveillance and the use of geolocational technologies; the concept can extend to privacy of personal objects located in private space such as personal writing, souvenirs and mementos; and

  • information privacy: regulation of the collection and handling of an individual’s personal information; this is also called ‘data protection’.

Recently, with the advent of Artificial Intelligence, computer algorithms and machine learning, privacy advocates and commentators have started to conceptualise additional dimensions of privacy:

  • behavioural privacy: typified by the privacy interests a person has while conducting publicly visible activities; it relates to the desire to remain anonymous and not have behaviour or movements tracked and monitored in public spaces;

  • proprietary privacy: privacy over personal physical objects, such as the way people password protect their mobile phones to prevent others from accessing their phone;

  • associational privacy: freedom to choose with whom you interact (i.e. friends, associations, groups and communities) without being monitored;

  • decisional privacy: freedom from unwanted interference with, and manipulation of, opinions, beliefs, decisions and actions (e.g. this may relate to freedom from interference with a person’s ways of acting, behaving and living, and their general goals and projects); and

  • intellectual privacy: privacy over individual thoughts and feelings, and privacy to develop opinions and beliefs through what we read, watch, listen to, record and write.

The first four concepts outlined above often overlap. For example, collecting a DNA tissue sample can involve bodily privacy, but the information extracted or tagged to it can involve information privacy.

Privacy is not the same as a ‘duty of confidence’, although it is a related concept often used to redress what is essentially a breach of privacy. The recipient of confidential information generally owes an obligation of confidence to the provider of the information, regardless of whether the information is personal information about the provider. Privacy is the right of the subject of the information, no matter who provides or receives it. For more information about the duty of confidence, see Chapter 9.1: Health and the law.

The right to privacy

Chapter: 12.2: Privacy and your rights

Contributor: Melanie Casley, Senior Privacy Consultant, Salinger Privacy

Current as of: 1 September 2024

Law Handbook Page: 993

Next Section: Privacy protection in Australia: The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and common law

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Privacy protection in Australia: The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and common law