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ANITA
L. ALLEN (CASTELLITTO) Professor of Law
and Philosophy presented “Minor Distractions: Protecting Children
from E-Commerce” at the University of Houston Law Review Symposium
on “E-Commerce and Privacy” in June. In March, she spoke on the ethical
dimensions of biotechnology at “Innovations,” a Talk Magazine/Miramax/PaineWebber
conference in Santa Barbara, California. She addressed the topic of
“Open Adoption” at the 2001 Meeting of the Association for the Study
of Law, Culture and Humanities. Professor Allen was also the featured
speaker at the AALS Section on Privacy and Defamation meeting “Perspectives
on Coercing Privacy,” and delivered the keynote address at the Third
Annual Alaine Locke Conference sponsored by the Howard University
Philosophy Department in Washington, D.C. She presented “Origins and
Sources of Privacy Law” for the Practicing Law Institute’s conference
on “Strategies for Compliance in a High Tech and Changing Regulatory
Environment” in New York. Professor Allen spoke on “Internet Privacy”
for a Symposium on E-commerce at Widener Law School; “Privacy and
Accountability” for a Legal Theory Workshop at the University of Michigan
Law School; “Is Privacy Still Possible” at New School University in
New York; and spoke at Georgetown University’s Law Journal Symposium
on “The Unwanted Gaze.” She spoke on “Public Intervention, Private
Life: The Changing Role of the State” for the Pennsylvania Bar Institute
and Penn Law School’s Family Law 2000 Symposium. Earlier in 2000,
Professor Allen served as a panelist on “Women, Privacy and Cyberspace”
for a Symposium on “Cyberspace and Privacy: A New Legal Paradigm”
at Stanford University Law School; on “Adoption and Mental Health”
and “Obligations for Birth Parents” at a University of Massachusetts
Symposium on “The Ethics of Adoption;” and gave the address “Why Journalists
Can’t Respect Privacy” at the conference “Privacy in the System of
Free Expression” at the Northwestern University Center for the Advanced
Study of Free Expression. |
Minor Distractions,
Houston Law Review (Forthcoming 2001)
Privacy
and Law (in volume of conference papers), ed. Beate Roessler (Stanford
University Press, Forthcoming 2001)
The Wanted
Gaze, Georgetown Law Review (2001)
The Ethics
of Interracial Marriage, in Women of Color Do Philosophy, ed. Naomi
Zack (Routledge, 2000)
Gender and
Privacy in Cyberspace, 52 Stanford Law Review 1157 (2000)
Privacy-as-Data
Control: Conceptual, Practical, and Moral Limits of Paradigm, Connecticut
Law Review (2000)
The Public
Right to Know, in The Encyclopedia of Ethical Issues in Politics and
the Media, ed. Ruth Chadwick (Academic Press, 2000)
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