Reinventing Data Protection?

This book is about data protection, privacy and liberty and the way these fundamental values of our societies are protected and enforced, particularly in their interaction with the ever developing capacities and possibilities of information and communication technologies. The authors are all closely...

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Bibliographic Details
Corporate Author: SpringerLink (Online service)
Other Authors: Gutwirth, Serge. (Editor), Poullet, Yves. (Editor), Hert, Paul. (Editor), Terwangne, Cčile. (Editor), Nouwt, Sjaak. (Editor)
Format: Electronic
Language:English
Published: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands, 2009.
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ezaccess.library.uitm.edu.my/login?url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-9498-9
Table of Contents:
  • Introduction. Opening address by the Belgian Minister of Foreign Affairs Karel De Gucht
  • I. Fundamental concepts. 1. European Data Protection<U+0019>s constitutional project. Its problematic recognition in Strasbourg and Luxembourg. 2. The right to informational self-determination and the value of self-development. Reassessing the importance of privacy for democracy. 3. Data Protection as Fundamental Right. 4. Consent in Data Protection Law: Privacy, Fair Processing, and Confidentiality. 5. The Concepts of Identity and Identifiablity: Legal and Technical Deadlocks for Protecting Human Beings in the Information Society
  • II. The actors. 6. Role of trade associations. Data protection as negotiable issue. 7. The Role of Data Protection Authorities. 8. The role of citizens. What can Dutch, Flemish and English students teach us about privacy?- III. Regulation. 9. Consent, Proportionality and Collective Power. 10. Is a Global Data Protection Regulatory Model Possible?. 11. Technical Standards as Data Protection Regulation. 12. Privacy Actors, Performances, and the Future of Privacy Protection. 13. First Pillar and Third Pillar: Need for a common approach on data protection?- IV. Specific Issues. 14. Who is profiling who? Invisible visibility. 15. Challenges in Privacy Advocacy. 16. Developing an Adequate Legal Framework for International Data Transfers. 17. Towards a common European approach to data protection: a critical analysis of data protection perspectives of the Council of Europe and the European Union. 18. Freedom of Information versus Privacy: Friends or Foes?- 19. Privacy Protection on the Internet: Risk Management and Networked Normativity. Conclusions: Towards a new generation of data protection legislations?.