Seen on Concurring Opinions, this announcement by Daniel Solove:
Professor Paul Schwartz (Berkeley School of Law) and I recently published a new book, PRIVACY LAW FUNDAMENTALS. This book is a distilled guide to the essential elements of U.S. data privacy law. In an easily-digestible format, the book covers core concepts, key laws, and leading cases.
The book explains the major provisions of all of the major privacy statutes, regulations, cases, including state privacy laws and FTC enforcement actions. It provides numerous charts and tables summarizing the privacy statutes (i.e. statutes with private rights of action, preemption, and liquidated damages, among other things). Topics covered include: the media, domestic law enforcement, national security, government records, health and genetic data, financial information, consumer data and business records, government access to private sector records, data security law, school privacy, employment privacy, and international privacy law.
This book provides an concise yet comprehensive overview of the field of privacy law for those who do not want to labor through lengthy treatises. Paul and I worked hard to keep it under 200 pages — our goal was to include a lot of information yet do so as succinctly as possible. PRIVACY LAW FUNDAMENTALS is written for those who want a handy reference, a bird’s eye view of the field, or a primer for courses in privacy law.
We wrote this book to be a useful reference for practitioners — ideally, a book they’d keep at the corner of their desks or in their briefcases.
We also think it can serve as a useful study aid for students taking privacy law courses.
You can check it out here, where you can download the table of contents.
It sounds like something that could also be a useful primer or resource for those of us who are not lawyers!