Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Books
Adam D. Moore, Privacy Rights: Moral and Legal Foundations (Pennsylvania State University
Press, Aug., 2010).
Adam D. Moore, Intellectual Property and Information Control: Philosophic Foundations and
Contemporary Issues (Routledge, Fall 2004 paperback, Fall 2001 hardback).
Adam D. Moore, Information Ethics: Privacy, Property, and Power. Edited by A. Moore
(Seattle WA: The University of Washington Press, 2005).
Adam D. Moore, Intellectual Property: Moral, Legal, and International Dilemmas. Edited by A.
Moore (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 1997).
Articles
Adam D. Moore, “Privacy in the Family,” with Newell, B., Metoyer, C. in The Social
Dimensions of Privacy. Edited by Beate Roessler and Dorota Mokrosinska (Cambridge
University Press, November 2015), p. 104-121.
Adam D. Moore, “Intellectual Property and Copyright,” The Book: A Global History. Edited by
Henry Woudhuysen and M. F. Suarez (Oxford University Press, 2014), p. 183-197.
Adam D. Moore, “Coercing Privacy and Moderate Paternalism: Allen on Unpopular Privacy,”
American Philosophical Association Newsletter in Philosophy and Law, Vol. 13 (Fall 2013): 9-
14.
Adam D. Moore, “Privacy, Speech, and the Law.” Journal of Information Ethics, Vol. 22
(summer 2013): 21-43.
Adam D. Moore, “A Lockean Theory of Intellectual Property Revisited.” San Diego Law
Review, Vol. 50 (Fall 2012): 1070-1103.
Adam D. Moore, “Drug Testing and Privacy in the Workplace,” The John Marshall Journal of
Computer & Information Law, Vol. 29 (Summer 2012): 463-492.
Adam D. Moore, “Privacy, Security, and Government Surveillance: WikiLeaks and the New
Accountability,” Public Affairs Quarterly, Vol. 25 (April 2011): 141-156.
Adam D. Moore, “Privacy, Public Health, and Controlling Medical Information,” HealthCare
Ethics Committee (HEC Forum), Vol. 23 (Dec., 2010): 225-240. Д
Adam D. Moore, “Defining Privacy,” Journal of Social Philosophy, Vol. 39 (fall, 2008): 411-
428.
Adam D. Moore, “Toward Informational Privacy Rights.” San Diego Law Review, Vol. 44
(Spring 2007): 809-845.
Adam D. Moore, “Privacy, Intellectual Property, and Hacking: Evaluating Free Access
Arguments,” in Internet Security: Hacking, Counterhacking, and Society, Ken Himma Ed. (Jones
& Bartlett Publishers, 2007), p. 235-254.
Adam D. Moore, “Privacy,” with Randal Kemp. Library Hi Tech: Special Issue on Information
Ethics, Vol. 25 (2007): 58-78 (primary author).
Adam D. Moore, “Privacy, Liberty, and the Genetic Modification of Humans.” Journal of
Philosophical Research, Special Supplement: Ethical Issues for the Twenty-First Century,
Frederick R Adams ed., (Charlottesville: Philosophy Documentation Center Press, 2005): 81-95.
Adam D. Moore, “Intellectual Property, Privilege, and Natural Rights.” Introduction to the
paperback edition of Intellectual Property and Information Control: Philosophic Foundations
and Contemporary Issues (Transaction Pub., Fall 2004), p. xi-xvii.
Adam D. Moore, “Values, Objectivity, and Relationalism.” The Journal of Value Inquiry, Vol.
38 (Fall 2004): 75-90.
Adam D. Moore, “Privacy: Its Meaning and Value.” American Philosophical Quarterly, Vol. 40
(Fall 2003): 215-227.
Adam D. Moore, “Intellectual Property: Theory, Privilege, and Pragmatism.” The Canadian
Journal of Law and Jurisprudence, Vol.16 (Fall 2003): 191-216.
Adam D. Moore, “Intellectual Property, Innovation, and Social Progress: The Case against
Incentives Based Arguments.” The Hamline Law Review, Vol. 26 (2003): 602-630.
Adam D. Moore, “Owning Genetic Information and Gene Enhancement Techniques: Why
Privacy and Property May Undermine Social Control of the Human Genome.” Bioethics, Vol. 14
(Spring 2000): 97-119.
Adam D. Moore, “Privacy and the Encryption Debate.” Knowledge, Technology, and Policy,
Vol. 12 (Winter 2000): 72-84.
Adam D. Moore, “Intangible Property: Privacy, Power, and Information Control,” American
Philosophical Quarterly, Vol. 35 (October, 1998): 365-378. Д
Adam D. Moore, “A Lockean Theory of Intellectual Property.” The Hamline Law Review, Vol.
21 (January, 1998): 65-108.
Adam D. Moore, “Property and Information Control.” The Proceedings of the Ohio
Philosophical Association (January, 1998): 109-122.