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Privacy Law and the Dead - A Reappraisal

Privacy Law and the Dead - A Reappraisal
Privacy Law and the Dead - A Reappraisal
Privacy is regarded as a fundamental right that is protected in multiple and varying ways. This cannot be said for privacy of the dead. Post-mortem privacy is increasingly becoming a vital topic of public and scholarly legal concern. This is the first of a two-part set of articles that examines whether, and to what extent post-mortem privacy is or can be protected under the law of England and Wales, through the common law, data protection, copyright and Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights. This article considers the importance of post-mortem privacy and reviews the law of privacy and post-mortem privacy in England and Wales including under the ECHR. It also considers medical confidentiality and whether common arguments that pertain to the dead (e.g. organ donation, burial, testamentary dispositions and posthumous copyright) lend support to post-mortem privacy arguments. This article introduces the concept of post-mortem privacy as envisioned by Harbinja and Edwards, and discusses whether the dead can be legal rights holders with a focus on the Interest Theory of rights. This allows for the discussion of post-mortem theories and harm. It concludes by supplementing Donnelly and McDonagh’s theories on ante-mortem anxiety and Davey’s theory on chilling effects with the jurisprudence of the ECHR to create a new legal right.
Privacy, common law, human rights, interest theory of rights, post-mortem privacy
1757-7632
468-502
Nwabueze, Remigius
6b2cdf07-8ee1-4d6f-9882-e3ea41e2aa0b
White, Matthew
5c7bf142-d479-40bc-8a10-7c49dd81adf5
Nwabueze, Remigius
6b2cdf07-8ee1-4d6f-9882-e3ea41e2aa0b
White, Matthew
5c7bf142-d479-40bc-8a10-7c49dd81adf5

Nwabueze, Remigius and White, Matthew (2025) Privacy Law and the Dead - A Reappraisal. Journal of Media Law, 16 (2), 468-502. (doi:10.1080/17577632.2024.2438395).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Privacy is regarded as a fundamental right that is protected in multiple and varying ways. This cannot be said for privacy of the dead. Post-mortem privacy is increasingly becoming a vital topic of public and scholarly legal concern. This is the first of a two-part set of articles that examines whether, and to what extent post-mortem privacy is or can be protected under the law of England and Wales, through the common law, data protection, copyright and Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights. This article considers the importance of post-mortem privacy and reviews the law of privacy and post-mortem privacy in England and Wales including under the ECHR. It also considers medical confidentiality and whether common arguments that pertain to the dead (e.g. organ donation, burial, testamentary dispositions and posthumous copyright) lend support to post-mortem privacy arguments. This article introduces the concept of post-mortem privacy as envisioned by Harbinja and Edwards, and discusses whether the dead can be legal rights holders with a focus on the Interest Theory of rights. This allows for the discussion of post-mortem theories and harm. It concludes by supplementing Donnelly and McDonagh’s theories on ante-mortem anxiety and Davey’s theory on chilling effects with the jurisprudence of the ECHR to create a new legal right.

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Accepted/In Press date: 21 October 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 6 January 2025
Keywords: Privacy, common law, human rights, interest theory of rights, post-mortem privacy

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 507131
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/507131
ISSN: 1757-7632
PURE UUID: e5a4f539-94c4-4e4b-bf03-410583f20e67
ORCID for Remigius Nwabueze: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3100-6427

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Date deposited: 27 Nov 2025 17:49
Last modified: 28 Nov 2025 02:39

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Author: Matthew White

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