From fears of anarchist terrorists in the early twentieth century
through cold war conflict and contemporary fears of extremist religious
terrorists, the American library community responded to the
use of libraries as a site for surveillance and source of dangerous
information in an increasingly proactive and organized manner. This
paper traces the evolution of privacy norms and standards within the
American library profession, focusing on the lack of regard for patron
confidentiality in the early twentieth century, the development
of privacy norms in the American Library Association (ALA) Code
of Ethics in 1938, and the increased protection of privacy rights as
the profession’s conceptions of privacy formed around the ALA’s
codes. Using Nissenbaum’s (2009) “contextual integrity” framework
within a broad historical analysis of ALA publications, the paper
examines the role of its codes regarding privacy in establishing a
normative framework around which the continued application of privacy
standards in libraries has taken place despite new technological
challenges and continued pressure from governments and outside
organizations to exploit patron information. The paper concludes
that the ALA’s unambiguous stance on, and consistent advocacy for,
privacy standards across the profession has enabled reactions to violations
of privacy norms that have shifted with technologies and new
social pressures. The ALA’s historic ability to maintain and protect
these professional standards serves as a compelling model for new
information professions that work to set professional standards in
areas that range from data-analytics to social networking.Open Restriction set for Item 102974 on 2017-08-31T19:35:07Z with date null by [email protected] by Steven Witt ([email protected]) on 2017-08-31T19:42:34Z
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