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40 Berkeley Tech. L.J. 1 (2025)

handle is hein.journals/berktech40 and id is 1 raw text is: 











        IS  PRIVACY REALLY A CIVIL RIGHT?

                      Anita  L  Allent and Christopher Muhawet




                                    ABSTRACT

     Sixty years ago, President Lyndon Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Civil rights
laws  aimed   at curbing  discrimination  and  inequality in  federal programs,  public
accommodations,   housing, employment,  education, voting and  lending faced opposition
before the Act and continue to do so today. Nevertheless, a swell of legal scholars, policy
analysts and advocacy groups in the United States now assert with favor a vital connection
between  privacy and civil rights. Historically, civil rights legislation was enacted to combat
group-based discrimination, a problem exacerbated by contemporary approaches to personal
data collection, artificial intelligence, algorithmic analytics and surveillance. Whether privacy is
a civil right, protects civil rights, or is protected by civil rights, the novel pairing of civil rights
and privacy rights commends itself. Yet, as we show, the pairing of privacy and civil rights is
complex, consequential, and potentially disappointing. Privacy and civil rights have a mixed
history of celebrated, but also ambivalent and condemnatory,  partnerships. Little direct
support for conceptualizing privacy or data protection as a civil right resides in the intricate
history of U.S. civil rights laws. Still, civil rights law is a dynamic moral, political and legal
concept adaptable to the demands  of new justice initiatives. With that in mind, this Article
critically examines the implications of legal interventions premised on pairing privacy rights
and civil rights. We trace the contentious but paramount ideas of civil rights and privacy rights
far back in time, revealing that important conceptual and historical issues muddy the waters
of the recent trend freely characterizing privacy rights as civil rights or as rights that protect or
are protected by civil rights. We conclude that one can sensibly contend today that privacy
rights do and ought to protect civil rights, exemplified by the right to vote and freely associate;
civil rights do and ought to protect privacy rights, exemplified by fair housing and employment
rights that support material contexts for intimate life; and crucially, that privacy rights are civil
rights, meaning that they are aspirational moral and human rights that ought to be a part of
society's positive law protections to foster goods that go to the heart of thriving lives and
effective civic participation for everyone. By illuminating the remote and recent sources of
what we term the privacy-and-civil-rights movement and its practical significance, we hope
to empower   those who  pair privacy and civil rights with greater clarity and awareness of
context, limitations, and likely outcomes.









         DOI: https://doi.org/10.15779/Z38KK94D6R
         © 2025 Anita L. Allen and Christopher Muhawe.
      t  Anita L. Allen is the Henry  R  Silverman  Professor of Law  and  Professor of
Philosophy at the University of Pennsylvania.
     tt  Christopher Muhawe is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the University of
Pennsylvania Penn Carey Law  School and the Annenberg  School for Communication.

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