Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2014
Abstract
The debate over the scope of constitutional protections for corporations has exploded with commentary on recent or pending Supreme Court cases, but scholars have left unexplored some of the hardest questions for the future, and the ones that offer the greatest potential for better understanding the nature of corporate rights. This Article analyzes one of those questions — whether corporations have, or should have, a constitutional right to privacy. First, the Article examines the contours of the question in Supreme Court jurisprudence and provides the first scholarly treatment of the growing body of conflicting law in the lower courts on this unresolved issue. Second, the Article examines approaches to determining the scope of corporate constitutional rights and argues that corporate privacy rights should be evaluated not by reference to the corporate form itself or a notion of corporate personhood, but rather by reference to the privacy interests of the various people involved in the corporation and their relationship to the corporation. Further, because corporations exist along an associational spectrum — from large, publicly traded corporations constituted purely for business purposes to smaller organizations with social, political, or religious purposes — the existence of a corporate privacy right will and should vary.
Keywords
Corporate constitutional rights, corporations, privacy
Publication Title
Minnesota Law Review
Repository Citation
Pollman, Elizabeth, "A Corporate Right to Privacy" (2014). All Faculty Scholarship. 2562.
https://scholarship.law.upenn.edu/faculty_scholarship/2562
Included in
Business Organizations Law Commons, Constitutional Law Commons, Law and Economics Commons, Legal History Commons, Legal Theory Commons, Privacy Law Commons, Supreme Court of the United States Commons
Publication Citation
99 Minn. L. Rev. 27 (2014)