What is privacy pedagogy for? Situating privacy in the purpose of the university

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to consider the contribution of privacy pedagogy to the role of the university.

Design/methodology/approach This paper takes up two arguments; first, it puts forward Arendt’s characterization that the purpose of the university is to prepare a new generation for the responsibility of renewing the shared human world (2006a). Second, it applies Wharton et al.’s (2023) philosophy of privacy pedagogy to the work of educating undergraduate students. This paper proposes that teaching about privacy as a “wicked problem” (Carcasson, 2017) under learning conditions that respect intellectual privacy (Richards, 2015) best prepares students for the deliberative engagement needed to renew the common world.

Findings This conceptual paper concludes that conditions of intellectual privacy and academic freedom matter beyond the university setting because the work of the university is ultimately to critique, conserve, change and create the shared human world. Privacy pedagogy, with its dual emphasis on intellectual privacy as a condition of learning and privacy as a subject of inquiry, contributes to the university’s work of preparing students for deliberative engagement with wicked problems inherent in this work.

Originality/value This paper situates privacy pedagogy within Arendt’s purpose of the university, to prepare a new generation to take responsibility for the shared human world. It discusses how privacy literacy education contributes to the purpose of the university by reinforcing intellectual privacy and academic freedom; fostering students’ capacity for dialogic thought and deliberation; and sustaining the private sphere to shelter plurality as a characteristic of the human condition and its possibility for renewal.

This author accepted manuscript is deposited under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC) licence. This means that anyone may distribute, adapt, and build upon the work for non-commercial purposes, subject to full attribution. If you wish to use this manuscript for commercial purposes, please visit Marketplace [https://marketplace.copyright.com/rs-ui-web/mp].

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Work Title What is privacy pedagogy for? Situating privacy in the purpose of the university
Access
Open Access
Creators
  1. Sarah Hartman-Caverly
Keyword
  1. privacy
  2. privacy pedagogy
  3. privacy literacy
  4. intellectual privacy
  5. Hannah Arendt
  6. life of the mind
  7. vita contemplativa
  8. university
  9. higher education
  10. philosophy of education
  11. pluralism
  12. deliberative pedagogy
  13. wicked problems
License CC BY-NC 4.0 (Attribution-NonCommercial)
Work Type Article
Publication Date April 17, 2025
Publisher Identifier (DOI)
  1. https://doi.org/10.1108/ILS-06-2024-0073
Related URLs
Deposited April 15, 2025

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Version 1
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  • Updated
  • Updated
  • Updated Keyword, Publisher Identifier (DOI), Related URLs, and 3 more Show Changes
    Keyword
    • privacy, privacy pedagogy, privacy literacy, intellectual privacy, Hannah Arendt, life of the mind, vita contemplativa, university, higher education, philosophy of education, pluralism, deliberative pedagogy, wicked problems
    Publisher Identifier (DOI)
    • https://doi.org/10.1108/ILS-06-2024-0073
    Related URLs
    • https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/ils-06-2024-0073/full/html, https://doi.org/10.1108/ILS-06-2024-0073
    Description
    • Purpose
    • The purpose of this paper is to consider the contribution of privacy pedagogy to the role of the university.
    • Design/methodology/approach
    • This paper takes up two arguments; first, it puts forward Arendt’s characterization that the purpose of the university is to prepare a new generation for the responsibility of renewing the shared human world (2006a). Second, it applies Wharton et al.’s (2023) philosophy of privacy pedagogy to the work of educating undergraduate students. This paper proposes that teaching about privacy as a “wicked problem” (Carcasson, 2017) under learning conditions that respect intellectual privacy (Richards, 2015) best prepares students for the deliberative engagement needed to renew the common world.
    • Findings
    • This conceptual paper concludes that conditions of intellectual privacy and academic freedom matter beyond the university setting because the work of the university is ultimately to critique, conserve, change and create the shared human world. Privacy pedagogy, with its dual emphasis on intellectual privacy as a condition of learning and privacy as a subject of inquiry, contributes to the university’s work of preparing students for deliberative engagement with wicked problems inherent in this work.
    • Originality/value
    • This paper situates privacy pedagogy within Arendt’s purpose of the university, to prepare a new generation to take responsibility for the shared human world. It discusses how privacy literacy education contributes to the purpose of the university by reinforcing intellectual privacy and academic freedom; fostering students’ capacity for dialogic thought and deliberation; and sustaining the private sphere to shelter plurality as a characteristic of the human condition and its possibility for renewal.
    Publication Date
    • 2025-04-17
    Publisher's Statement
    • This author accepted manuscript is deposited under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC) licence. This means that anyone may distribute, adapt, and build upon the work for non-commercial purposes, subject to full attribution. If you wish to use this manuscript for commercial purposes, please visit Marketplace [https://marketplace.copyright.com/rs-ui-web/mp].
  • Added Creator Sarah Hartman-Caverly
  • Added ILS_PrivacyPedagogy_HartmanCaverly_AAM022025.pdf
  • Added README_ILSWhatIsPrivacyPedagogyFor_HartmanCaverly_2025.txt
  • Updated License Show Changes
    License
    • https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
  • Published
  • Updated