![cover of the book Controlling Knowledge: Freedom of Information and Privacy Protection in a Networked World](/covers/files_200/1154000/afb876293db518ff712bd26187ba9249-d.jpg)
Ebook: Controlling Knowledge: Freedom of Information and Privacy Protection in a Networked World
Author: Lorna Stefanick
Aiming to clarify rather than mystify, Stefanick outlines the history and application of FOIP legislation, with special focus on how these laws affect the individual. To illustrate the impact of FOIP, she examines the notion of informed consent, looks at concerns about surveillance in the digital age, and explores the sometimes insidious influence of Facebook. Specialists in public policy and public administration, information technology, communications, law, criminal justice, sociology, and health care will find much here that bears directly on their work, while students and general readers will welcome the book's down-to-earth language and accessible style.
Intended to serve as a ''citizen's guide,'' Controlling Knowledge is a vital resource for anyone seeking to understand how freedom of information and privacy protection are legally defined and how this legislation is shaping our individual rights as citizens of the information age.
Lorna Stefanick is an associate professor in the Governance, Law, and Management program in the Centre for State and Legal Studies at Athabasca University