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This book is the first comprehensive examination of the extent to which the human right to data privacy has shaped EU law and policy within the contexts of law enforcement and national security, covering the fields of AI and data-driven surveillance, data protection, digital communications, cross-border data transfers, and passenger information.
List of contents
- 1: An Introduction: Article 8 ECHR and Communications Data in the Global Data Privacy Framework
- 2: The Approach of the Strasbourg Court: Article 8 ECHR and Interception of Communications
- 3: The Approach of the Strasbourg Court: Article 8 ECHR and Communications Data
- 4: The Evolving Dialogue between Luxembourg and Strasbourg
- 5: The Approach of the Court of Justice: Article 8 ECHR and Data Retention
- 6: The Data Retention Directive and Article 8 ECHR
- 7: The Data Retention Directive and the National Courts
- 8: Post-Legislative Review of the Data Retention Directive
- 9: The EU Passenger Name Record Data Directive and Data Retention
About the author
Nora Ni Loideain is an Assistant Professor in Law and Director of the Information Law & Policy Centre at the University of Londons Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, where she teaches and researches in the fields of digital rights, data protection, European human rights law, and EU law. She holds BA, LLB, and LLM (Public Law) degrees from the National University of Ireland, Galway, and was awarded a PhD in European human rights law and EU law by the University of Cambridge. She is joint Editor-in-Chief of
International Data Privacy Law and an independent advisor to the UK government.
Summary
This book is the first comprehensive examination of the extent to which the human right to data privacy has shaped EU law and policy within the contexts of law enforcement and national security, covering the fields of AI and data-driven surveillance, data protection, digital communications, cross-border data transfers, and passenger information.