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Reforming the Remedy: Getting the Right Remedial Structure to Protect Personal Privacy
Author(s) -
Nicholas Petrie
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
deakin law review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1835-9264
pISSN - 1321-3660
DOI - 10.21153/dlr2012vol17no1art71
Subject(s) - damages , statutory law , law , personal injury , privacy policy , cause of action , personally identifiable information , internet privacy , privacy laws of the united states , privacy law , action (physics) , information privacy , political science , business , plaintiff , physics , quantum mechanics , computer science
Politicians, journalists and academics have exhausted many hours over the last decade debating the question of whether Australia should have a statutory cause of action for invasion of personal privacy. In the midst of this ongoing debate, a simple question has often been overlooked: what remedies should be available to a person whose privacy been breached? In posing and answering that question, it is argued that a wide range of remedies for intrusions of personal privacy should be available to the courts. Perhaps most controversially, the author asserts that exemplary damages, which aim to punish defendants and deter future breaches of the law, should be available for the most heinous breaches of personal privacy.

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