1. For example, some scholars differentiate privacy into decisional privacy (referring largely to personal decisions regarding sexuality, the body and identity, including abortion right and contraception choices); informational privacy (referring to data collection and presentation of oneself); and local privacy (referring to spatial isolation and privacy at home). See Beate Rössler, ‘New Ways of Thinking about Privacy’ in John S Dryzek, Bonnie Honig and Anne Phillips (eds),The Oxford Handbook of Political Theory(Oxford University Press, 2006) 702–8. Frederick Schauer identified the four main aspects of privacy to be the image right of a person; information about a person's history; the right to keep police outside one's home; and freedom from state interference in making a wide range of personal choices. See Frederick Schauer, 'Introduction: The Legal Construction of Privacy' (2001) 68Social Research52.
2. See Whitman (n 3).