Description

Book Synopsis
Bringing together leading European scholars, this thought-provoking Research Handbook provides a state-of-the-art overview of the scope of research and current thinking in the area of European data protection. Offering critical insights on prominent strands of research, it examines key challenges and potential solutions in the field.



Chapters explore the fundamental right to personal data protection, government-to-business data sharing, data protection as performance-based regulation, privacy and marketing in data-driven business models, data protection and judicial automation, and the role of consent in an algorithmic society. Expert contributors investigate the impact of Brexit on the right to data portability, essential equivalence as a benchmark for international data transfers following Schrems II, and data protection in relation to the application and boundaries of the Law Enforcement Directive, trade secret privileges, and competition law.



Comprehensive, yet accessible, the Research Handbook on EU Data Protection Law will be a valuable resource for students and scholars of technology and data protection law, privacy law, and European law more broadly, while also being a useful tool for practitioners and policymakers concerned with data protection.



Trade Review
‘This volume contains a number of impressive individual contributions examining highly topical areas of data protection law. They illuminate current cutting-edge issues at a high scholarly level, making the book a useful addition to any data protection library.’ -- Christopher Kuner, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium

Table of Contents
Contents Preface xvii Introduction to Research Handbook on EU Data Protection Law 1 Ronald Leenes, Eleni Kosta and Irene Kamara 1 Two decades of Article 8 CFR: A critical exploration of the fundamental right to personal data protection in EU law 11 Plixavra Vogiatzoglou and Peggy Valcke 2 Data protection as performance-based regulation 50 Jakub Míšek 3 A divided European data protection framework: a critical reflection on the choices of the European legislator post-Lisbon 68 Eleni Kosta 4 A critical reflection on the material scope of the application of the Law Enforcement Directive and its boundaries with the General Data Protection Regulation 91 Magdalena Brewczyńska 5 Government-to-Business (G2B) research data sharing and the GDPR: reconciling the ‘public’ with the ‘private’? 115 Stergios Aidinlis 6 Conceptualising the interrelation between data protection regulation and competition law 143 Alessia Sophia D’Amico 7 The intersection of data protection rights and trade secret privileges in ‘algorithmic transparency’ 163 Katarina Foss-Solbrekk and Ann Kristin Glenster 8 ‘Paying’ with personal data in digital business to consumer contracts: Bringing successfully together two worlds apart? 184 Thalia Prastitou Merdi 9 Data-driven business models – privacy and marketing 206 Jan Trzaskowski 10 ‘Dark patterns’: The case for regulatory pluralism between the European Union's consumer and data protection regimes 240 M.R. Leiser 11 Data protection and judicial automation 270 Marco Almada and Maria Dymitruk 12 Reaching beyond its territory – an analysis of the extraterritorial scope of European data protection law 290 Simon Henseler and Aurelia Tamò-Larrieux 13 Essential equivalence as a benchmark for international data transfers after Schrems II 313 Laura Drechsler and Irene Kamara 14 The radical reframing of the purpose limitation principle – Why the Dutch delegation uprooted data protection 352 Tijmen H.A. Wisman and Rein J.L. Tijm 15 Context as key: The protection of personal integrity by means of the purpose limitation principle 380 Heidi Beate Bentzen 16 Scoping risk assessment of ADM systems using AI 404 Michelle Seng Ah Lee, Jennifer Cobbe, Heleen Janssen and Jatinder Singh 17 Understanding the legal bases for automated decision-making under the GDPR 434 Maja Nišević, Bart Custers, Eduard Fosch-Villaronga and Alan M. Sears 18 The role of consent in an algorithmic society – Its evolution, scope, failings, and re-conceptualization 454 Bart H. M. Custers, Eduard Fosch-Villaronga, Simone van der Hof, Bart Schermer, Alan M. Sears and Aurelia Tamò-Larrieux 19 Explicit consent and alternative data protection processing grounds for health research 473 Jiahong Chen, Edward S. Dove and Himani Bhakuni 20 Data protection, control and participation beyond consent – ‘seeking the views’ of data subjects in data protection impact assessments 502 Athena Christofi, Jonas Breuer, Ellen Wauters, Peggy Valcke and Jo Pierson 21 Meaningful transparency through data rights: A multidimensional analysis 529 Laurens Naudts, Pierre Dewitte and Jef Ausloos 22 Between incrementalism and revolution: How the GDPR right to data portability is revamped by the EU and the UK post Brexit 570 Wenlong Li 23 Data protection enforcement in the era of the Directive on Whistleblowers: towards a collective approach? 598 Amélie Lachapelle Index

Research Handbook on EU Data Protection Law

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    A Hardback by Eleni Kosta, Ronald Leenes, Irene Kamara

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      Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
      Publication Date: 22/04/2022
      ISBN13: 9781800371675, 978-1800371675
      ISBN10: 1800371675

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Bringing together leading European scholars, this thought-provoking Research Handbook provides a state-of-the-art overview of the scope of research and current thinking in the area of European data protection. Offering critical insights on prominent strands of research, it examines key challenges and potential solutions in the field.



      Chapters explore the fundamental right to personal data protection, government-to-business data sharing, data protection as performance-based regulation, privacy and marketing in data-driven business models, data protection and judicial automation, and the role of consent in an algorithmic society. Expert contributors investigate the impact of Brexit on the right to data portability, essential equivalence as a benchmark for international data transfers following Schrems II, and data protection in relation to the application and boundaries of the Law Enforcement Directive, trade secret privileges, and competition law.



      Comprehensive, yet accessible, the Research Handbook on EU Data Protection Law will be a valuable resource for students and scholars of technology and data protection law, privacy law, and European law more broadly, while also being a useful tool for practitioners and policymakers concerned with data protection.



      Trade Review
      ‘This volume contains a number of impressive individual contributions examining highly topical areas of data protection law. They illuminate current cutting-edge issues at a high scholarly level, making the book a useful addition to any data protection library.’ -- Christopher Kuner, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium

      Table of Contents
      Contents Preface xvii Introduction to Research Handbook on EU Data Protection Law 1 Ronald Leenes, Eleni Kosta and Irene Kamara 1 Two decades of Article 8 CFR: A critical exploration of the fundamental right to personal data protection in EU law 11 Plixavra Vogiatzoglou and Peggy Valcke 2 Data protection as performance-based regulation 50 Jakub Míšek 3 A divided European data protection framework: a critical reflection on the choices of the European legislator post-Lisbon 68 Eleni Kosta 4 A critical reflection on the material scope of the application of the Law Enforcement Directive and its boundaries with the General Data Protection Regulation 91 Magdalena Brewczyńska 5 Government-to-Business (G2B) research data sharing and the GDPR: reconciling the ‘public’ with the ‘private’? 115 Stergios Aidinlis 6 Conceptualising the interrelation between data protection regulation and competition law 143 Alessia Sophia D’Amico 7 The intersection of data protection rights and trade secret privileges in ‘algorithmic transparency’ 163 Katarina Foss-Solbrekk and Ann Kristin Glenster 8 ‘Paying’ with personal data in digital business to consumer contracts: Bringing successfully together two worlds apart? 184 Thalia Prastitou Merdi 9 Data-driven business models – privacy and marketing 206 Jan Trzaskowski 10 ‘Dark patterns’: The case for regulatory pluralism between the European Union's consumer and data protection regimes 240 M.R. Leiser 11 Data protection and judicial automation 270 Marco Almada and Maria Dymitruk 12 Reaching beyond its territory – an analysis of the extraterritorial scope of European data protection law 290 Simon Henseler and Aurelia Tamò-Larrieux 13 Essential equivalence as a benchmark for international data transfers after Schrems II 313 Laura Drechsler and Irene Kamara 14 The radical reframing of the purpose limitation principle – Why the Dutch delegation uprooted data protection 352 Tijmen H.A. Wisman and Rein J.L. Tijm 15 Context as key: The protection of personal integrity by means of the purpose limitation principle 380 Heidi Beate Bentzen 16 Scoping risk assessment of ADM systems using AI 404 Michelle Seng Ah Lee, Jennifer Cobbe, Heleen Janssen and Jatinder Singh 17 Understanding the legal bases for automated decision-making under the GDPR 434 Maja Nišević, Bart Custers, Eduard Fosch-Villaronga and Alan M. Sears 18 The role of consent in an algorithmic society – Its evolution, scope, failings, and re-conceptualization 454 Bart H. M. Custers, Eduard Fosch-Villaronga, Simone van der Hof, Bart Schermer, Alan M. Sears and Aurelia Tamò-Larrieux 19 Explicit consent and alternative data protection processing grounds for health research 473 Jiahong Chen, Edward S. Dove and Himani Bhakuni 20 Data protection, control and participation beyond consent – ‘seeking the views’ of data subjects in data protection impact assessments 502 Athena Christofi, Jonas Breuer, Ellen Wauters, Peggy Valcke and Jo Pierson 21 Meaningful transparency through data rights: A multidimensional analysis 529 Laurens Naudts, Pierre Dewitte and Jef Ausloos 22 Between incrementalism and revolution: How the GDPR right to data portability is revamped by the EU and the UK post Brexit 570 Wenlong Li 23 Data protection enforcement in the era of the Directive on Whistleblowers: towards a collective approach? 598 Amélie Lachapelle Index

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