Privacy Studies Journal I: Gaining New Perspectives on Privacy – From Eye-tracking, via AI, to Historical Houses

  • Workshop
  • Music Room
  • Wednesday 21.05 — 10:30 - 11:45

Organising Institution

Privacy Studies Journal

International

Privacy Studies Journal (PSJ) is a fully open access, multidisciplinary, peer-reviewed journal published by the Danish National Research Foundation Centre for Privacy Studies, University of Copenhagen. It has an international editorial board with members representing a broad range of academic fields. PSJ spans the present and the past, and envisions the future. Featuring original, high-quality research on privacy in its broadest sense and with the human component in focus, we welcome contributions that take privacy and the private as catalysts for analysis.
Privacy Studies Journal emerged in 2021 with the ambition to probe facets of privacy broadly understood. We believe that a multidisciplinary approach reveals how notions of privacy affect everything from family constellations, via technology regulation, to systems of political power. Four years in, the journal has published a series of widely different articles, and we are still looking to incorporate new fields of knowledge. Join us for a dynamic session on notions of privacy in different fields, contexts and cultures. We will explore together how diverse approaches and experiences shed new light on privacy. We want to nourish a transdisciplinary privacy studies community around PSJ and welcome participants of all backgrounds and levels of experience. This workshop is the first of two; it is encouraged, but not required to participate in both.

Host

Mette Birkedal Bruun

Privacy Studies Journal / Centre for Privacy Studies - Denmark

Mette Birkedal Bruun, PhD, dr.theol., is Professor of Church History at the University of Copenhagen and director of the Centre for Privacy Studies (DNRF138, 2017–2027). She is the editor-in-chief of the Privacy Studies Journal, board member of the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters, and vice chair of the Danish Council for Research and Innovation Policy. Her research focuses on the history of monasticism, religiously motivated withdrawal from the world, and zones of privacy in past and present.