Data Protection and Privacy Under Pressure: Transatlantic tensions, EU surveillance, and big dataSince the Snowden revelations, the adoption in May 2016 of the General Data Protection Regulation and several ground-breaking judgments of the Court of Justice of the European Union, data protection and privacy are high on the agenda of policymakers, industries and the legal research community. |
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Inhoudsopgave
1 Prologue | 13 |
2 Guide for the reader | 14 |
Underresourced Special Rapporteurs | 16 |
4 The SRP as a critical friend and developer of a common substantive interpretation of the right to privacy in a variety of settings | 18 |
5 Surveillance privacy and international law | 19 |
6 Privacy as a universal enabling right to develop ones personality | 36 |
7 Is privacy like Coke? The cultural flavour of privacy as a universal right | 41 |
8 Epilogue | 45 |
1 Introduction | 171 |
2 European Essential Guarantees | 172 |
3 Provided by law | 173 |
4 Necessity and proportionality | 175 |
5 An independent oversight mechanism | 181 |
6 Effective remedies available to the individual | 183 |
7 The Court of Justice confirms the European essential guarantees | 185 |
8 EPILOGUE | 189 |
9 Selected literature | 46 |
Clear since 911 clearer since Snowden | 49 |
2 Safe Harbour dead | 53 |
3 Long live the Privacy Shield? Tele2 Sverige AB and Digital Rights Ireland respectively La Quadrature du Net and Others v Commission | 58 |
4 Data collection for national security purposes | 61 |
5 Data collection for Law enforcement or public interest purposes | 70 |
6 Conclusion | 72 |
7 Selected Literature | 73 |
1 Introduction | 77 |
2 The extraterritorial reach of the GDPR | 78 |
3 Assessment under public international law | 90 |
4 Conclusion | 97 |
5 Selected Literature | 98 |
1 Introduction | 101 |
Yahoo | 104 |
three alternatives | 106 |
4 Reference for preliminary ruling from the French Council of State | 109 |
The way forward? | 111 |
6 Strengths and weaknesses of a more flexible approach | 116 |
7 Selected Literature | 119 |
1 Introduction | 123 |
An Overview | 125 |
3 The place of onward transfers in EU data protection law | 129 |
The case of onward transfers between public authorities | 134 |
A look at the EUUS Privacy Shield | 139 |
Is there a case for transnational private regulation? | 142 |
7 Selected literature | 144 |
1 Introduction | 147 |
2 A Brief Scope of the EUUS PNR Agreement | 150 |
3 What happens to the PNR data in the US? | 151 |
4 Issues with respect to EU Fundamental Rights of Privacy and Personal Data Protection | 153 |
5 Conclusion | 167 |
6 Selected Literature | 168 |
1 Introduction | 193 |
2 The EU diverse landscape of intelligence oversight | 197 |
3 Proportionality and public trust | 209 |
4 Concluding remarks | 211 |
5 Selected Literature | 212 |
1 Introduction | 215 |
2 Three waves in the evolution of panEuropean immigration databases | 218 |
3 Conclusion | 247 |
4 Selected Literature | 248 |
1 Introduction | 254 |
2 Predictive policing methods | 264 |
3 Review methodology | 268 |
4 Review results | 269 |
5 Discussion conclusions | 278 |
6 Selected Literature | 281 |
Review protocol | 289 |
Review flow diagram | 290 |
Overview of the selected studies with their main characteristics | 291 |
1 Introduction | 293 |
2 Big data developments in the pharmaceutical sector | 295 |
3 Genetics and genomics as new pharmaceutical technologies | 296 |
4 Predictive and personalized medicine | 298 |
5 Risks and challenges in relation to genetic tests | 301 |
6 European Convention on Human Rights and the Oviedo Convention | 302 |
7 UNESCO Declaration on the Human Genome and Human Rights | 305 |
8 EU data protection law | 306 |
309 | |
1 CHILDRENS RIGHTS AND PERSONALISED ADVERTISING | 313 |
2 PERSONALISED ADVERTISING IN THE CURRENT REGULATORY FRAMEWORK | 321 |
3 SELFREGULATION AND TARGETING CHILDREN WITH PERSONALISED ADVERTISING | 331 |
4 RECONCILING CHILDRENS AND ADVERTISERS BEST INTERESTS | 335 |
337 | |