Privacy Studies Journal
Privacy Studies Journal is an interdisciplinary, open access, peer-reviewed journal. It is published by the Danish National Research Foundation Centre for Privacy Studies, University of Copenhagen (PRIVACY), and has its home on the online journal platform tidsskrift.dk hosted by the Danish Royal Library.
Privacy Studies Journal spans the present and the past, and envisions the future. Featuring original, high-quality research on privacy in its broadest sense and with the human component in focus, we will welcome contributions that take privacy and the private as catalysts for analysis of, for example:
Architecture and the built environment
Art
Behaviour
Bodily practices
Business and operational aspects
Crises and crisis management
Economics
Health
Ideas
Information and communication technologies
Law
Literature
Material culture
Philosophy
Policy
Power
Religion
Societal structures
Space (domestic, urban, professional …)
Technological innovation
We aim for Privacy Studies Journal to provide scholars with a thoughtful and academically vigorous forum for research into privacy and the private. By bringing together contemporary, historical, and future perspectives and by keeping an open mind to potential cross-pollination between research fields Privacy Studies Journal wishes to set new scholarly standards, offering an opportunity to generate insights that cross disciplinary boundaries.
The Privacy Studies Journal editorial team
Mette Birkedal Bruun, director of PRIVACY, Professor of Church History, University of Copenhagen, Chief editor
Emma Klakk, Academic Officer, Centre for Privacy Studies, University of Copenhagen, Assistant Editor
Editorial Board
Andrew Riggsby, Prof. in Classics, Professor of Art History, University of Texas at Austin
Anne Cheung, Professor of Law, University of Hong Kong
Beate Rössler, Professor of Ethics, University of Amsterdam
Catherine Richardson, Professor in Renaissance Studies, University of Kent
Frederik J. Zuiderveen Borgesius, Professor of Law, Radboud University
Itsuko Yamaguchi, Professor of Information Law and Policy, University of Tokyo
Kai Rannenberg, Chair of Mobile Business and Multilateral Security, Goethe University Frankfurt
Maarten Delbeke, Professor of the History and Theory of Architecture, ETH, Zurich