\(
\def\WIPO{World Intellectual Property Organisation}
\)
Emerging challenges in privacy law : comparative perspectives.
Witzleb, Normann; Lindsay, David; Paterson, Moira; Rodrick, Sharon. Editors.; Aernecke, Eva; Barendt, Eric; Bygrave, Lee; Crofts, Thomas; Dörr, Dieter; Fink, Udo; Greenleaf, Graham; Hustinx, Peter; Kenyon, Andrew; Lindsay, David; Moreham, Nicole; Paterson, Moira; Pilgrim, Timothy; Richardson, Megan; Rodrick, Sharon; Tilbury, Michael; Waters, Nigel; Witzleb, Normann. Contributors.
2014
F 64 WIT.E
Available at WIPO Library
Items
Details
Title
Emerging challenges in privacy law : comparative perspectives.
Author
Witzleb, Normann; Lindsay, David; Paterson, Moira; Rodrick, Sharon. Editors.
Aernecke, Eva; Barendt, Eric; Bygrave, Lee; Crofts, Thomas; Dörr, Dieter; Fink, Udo; Greenleaf, Graham; Hustinx, Peter; Kenyon, Andrew; Lindsay, David; Moreham, Nicole; Paterson, Moira; Pilgrim, Timothy; Richardson, Megan; Rodrick, Sharon; Tilbury, Michael; Waters, Nigel; Witzleb, Normann. Contributors.
Aernecke, Eva; Barendt, Eric; Bygrave, Lee; Crofts, Thomas; Dörr, Dieter; Fink, Udo; Greenleaf, Graham; Hustinx, Peter; Kenyon, Andrew; Lindsay, David; Moreham, Nicole; Paterson, Moira; Pilgrim, Timothy; Richardson, Megan; Rodrick, Sharon; Tilbury, Michael; Waters, Nigel; Witzleb, Normann. Contributors.
Description
xvii, 448 pages ; 24 cm.
ISBN
9781107041677 Print
9781107300491 eBook
9781107300491 eBook
Alternate Call Number
F 64 WIT.E
Summary
This collection of essays explores current developments in privacy law, including reform of data protection laws, privacy and the media, social control and surveillance, privacy and the Internet, and privacy and the courts. It places these developments into a broader international context, with a particular focus on the European Union, the United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand. Adopting a comparative approach, it creates an important resource for understanding international trends in the reform of privacy and data protection laws across a variety of contexts. Written by internationally recognised experts, Emerging Challenges in Privacy Law: Comparative Perspectives provides an accessible introduction to contemporary legal and policy debates in privacy and data protection law. It is essential reading for academics, policy makers and practitioners interested in current challenges facing privacy and data protection law in Europe and in the common law world.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Formatted Contents Note
An overview of emerging challenges in privacy law
Part I. Reforming the Data Protection Frameworks: Australian and EU Perspectives
Navigating privacy in the information age: the Australian perspective
Responding to new challenges to privacy through law reform: a privacy advocate's perspective
The reform of EU data protection: towards more effective and more consistent data protection across the EU
Part II. Privacy in European human right instruments
Protection of privacy in the EU, individual rights and legal instruments
a world data privacy treaty? 'Globalisation' and 'modernisation' of Council of Europe Convention
Part III. Privacy protection through common law and statute
Protection against intrusion in English legislation
Privacy: common law or human right?
English privacy law in the light of the Leveson Report
Part IV. Privacy, surveillance and control
Surveillance in public places: the regulatory dilemma
Privacy and young people: controlling anti-social behaviour through loss of anonymity
Part V. Privacy and the Internet
Data privacy law and the Internet: policy challenges
The 'right to be forgotten' in European data protection law
Privacy online: reform beyond law reform
Privacy protection and data clouds in Germany and the influence of European law
Part VI. Privacy, the courts and the media
Open justice, privacy and suppressing identity in legal proceedings: 'what's in a name?' and would anonymity 'smell as sweet'?
Interim injunctions for invasions of privacy: challenging the rule in Bonnard v. Perryman?
Part I. Reforming the Data Protection Frameworks: Australian and EU Perspectives
Navigating privacy in the information age: the Australian perspective
Responding to new challenges to privacy through law reform: a privacy advocate's perspective
The reform of EU data protection: towards more effective and more consistent data protection across the EU
Part II. Privacy in European human right instruments
Protection of privacy in the EU, individual rights and legal instruments
a world data privacy treaty? 'Globalisation' and 'modernisation' of Council of Europe Convention
Part III. Privacy protection through common law and statute
Protection against intrusion in English legislation
Privacy: common law or human right?
English privacy law in the light of the Leveson Report
Part IV. Privacy, surveillance and control
Surveillance in public places: the regulatory dilemma
Privacy and young people: controlling anti-social behaviour through loss of anonymity
Part V. Privacy and the Internet
Data privacy law and the Internet: policy challenges
The 'right to be forgotten' in European data protection law
Privacy online: reform beyond law reform
Privacy protection and data clouds in Germany and the influence of European law
Part VI. Privacy, the courts and the media
Open justice, privacy and suppressing identity in legal proceedings: 'what's in a name?' and would anonymity 'smell as sweet'?
Interim injunctions for invasions of privacy: challenging the rule in Bonnard v. Perryman?
Published
New York : Cambridge University Press, 2014.
Language
English
Record Appears in
all