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Managing privacy through accountabil...
~
Guagnin, Daniel.
Managing privacy through accountability[electronic resource] /
紀錄類型:
書目-語言資料,印刷品 : Monograph/item
杜威分類號:
323.44/8
書名/作者:
Managing privacy through accountability/ edited By Daniel Guagnin ... [et al.].
其他作者:
Guagnin, Daniel.
出版者:
Houndmills, Basingstoke ; : Palgrave Macmillan,, 2012.
面頁冊數:
1 online resource.
標題:
Privacy, Right of.
標題:
Responsibility.
標題:
Data protection.
標題:
Confidential communications.
標題:
Electronic surveillance.
標題:
POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Freedom & Security / Civil Rights
標題:
POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Freedom & Security / Human Rights
ISBN:
9781137032225 (electronic bk.)
ISBN:
1137032227 (electronic bk.)
ISBN:
9780230369320 (Cloth)
ISBN:
0230369324 (Cloth)
書目註:
Includes bibliographical references.
內容註:
List of Tables -- List of Figures -- Preface -- Notes on Contributors -- Introduction; D.Neyland, D.Guagnin, L.Hempel, C.Ilten, I.Kroener & H.Postigo -- The Meaning of 'Accountability' in the Information Privacy Context; C.Raab -- The Accountability Approach to Privacy and Data Protection: Assumptions and Caveats; C.J.Bennett -- The Accountability Principle in Data Protection Regulation: Origin, Development and Future Directions; J.Alhadeff, B.V.Alsenoy & J.Dumortier -- The Challenges of Working out Surveillance and Accountability in Theory and Practice; D.Neyland -- Bridging the Gap: We Need to Get Together; D.Guagnin, L.Hempel & C.Ilten -- Privacy and Trust In Sociotechnical Systems of Accountability; P.M.Regan & D.G.Johnson -- Maintaining Sovereignty over Personal Data in Social Networking Sites; E.AImeur, S.Gambs & A.Ho -- 'Cold Intimacies': Community Notification, Satellite Tracking and the Ruined Privacy of Sex Offenders; M.Nellis -- Electronic Health Records b6 s The Case for Accountability in Hospitals; A.Dix -- Accountability and System Responsibility: New Concepts in Data Protection Law and Human Rights Law; P.De Hert -- Accountability and Independence of Data Protection Authorities b6 s A Trade-off?; P.Schutz -- Beyond Accountability, the Return to Privacy?; R.Gellert & S.Gutwirth -- --.
摘要、提要註:
Surveillance technologies form an increasingly ubiquitous presence in many EU member states. CCTV cameras, traffic regulation systems, ID cards, biometric developments, airport security checks and on-line forms of dataveillance are just some of the many ways in which the public are subject to forms of scrutiny, data collection, data storage and data sharing. These surveillance systems are often welcomed as a means of protection and for easing public fears, but also raise profound questions for democratic states of the nature of the relationship between state and citizenry. Currently, regulation of surveillance systems differs across EU member states, including legal prohibitions, forms of licensing, self-certification, data protection and information or data protection commissioners. Forms of accountability have emerged as one means by which the potential consequences of surveillance systems might be recognised and assessed and formally incorporated into public sector policy or into the ways in which companies do business. Managing Privacy through Accountability draws together contributions from leading figures in the field of surveillance to engage in discussion of the emergence of accountability as a central motif in debates around privacy invasion and privacy protection. It is the first book to engage in this debate.
電子資源:
An electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click for information
Managing privacy through accountability[electronic resource] /
Managing privacy through accountability
[electronic resource] /edited By Daniel Guagnin ... [et al.]. - Houndmills, Basingstoke ;Palgrave Macmillan,2012. - 1 online resource.
Includes bibliographical references.
List of Tables -- List of Figures -- Preface -- Notes on Contributors -- Introduction; D.Neyland, D.Guagnin, L.Hempel, C.Ilten, I.Kroener & H.Postigo -- The Meaning of 'Accountability' in the Information Privacy Context; C.Raab -- The Accountability Approach to Privacy and Data Protection: Assumptions and Caveats; C.J.Bennett -- The Accountability Principle in Data Protection Regulation: Origin, Development and Future Directions; J.Alhadeff, B.V.Alsenoy & J.Dumortier -- The Challenges of Working out Surveillance and Accountability in Theory and Practice; D.Neyland -- Bridging the Gap: We Need to Get Together; D.Guagnin, L.Hempel & C.Ilten -- Privacy and Trust In Sociotechnical Systems of Accountability; P.M.Regan & D.G.Johnson -- Maintaining Sovereignty over Personal Data in Social Networking Sites; E.AImeur, S.Gambs & A.Ho -- 'Cold Intimacies': Community Notification, Satellite Tracking and the Ruined Privacy of Sex Offenders; M.Nellis -- Electronic Health Records b6 s The Case for Accountability in Hospitals; A.Dix -- Accountability and System Responsibility: New Concepts in Data Protection Law and Human Rights Law; P.De Hert -- Accountability and Independence of Data Protection Authorities b6 s A Trade-off?; P.Schutz -- Beyond Accountability, the Return to Privacy?; R.Gellert & S.Gutwirth -- --.
Surveillance technologies form an increasingly ubiquitous presence in many EU member states. CCTV cameras, traffic regulation systems, ID cards, biometric developments, airport security checks and on-line forms of dataveillance are just some of the many ways in which the public are subject to forms of scrutiny, data collection, data storage and data sharing. These surveillance systems are often welcomed as a means of protection and for easing public fears, but also raise profound questions for democratic states of the nature of the relationship between state and citizenry. Currently, regulation of surveillance systems differs across EU member states, including legal prohibitions, forms of licensing, self-certification, data protection and information or data protection commissioners. Forms of accountability have emerged as one means by which the potential consequences of surveillance systems might be recognised and assessed and formally incorporated into public sector policy or into the ways in which companies do business. Managing Privacy through Accountability draws together contributions from leading figures in the field of surveillance to engage in discussion of the emergence of accountability as a central motif in debates around privacy invasion and privacy protection. It is the first book to engage in this debate.
ISBN: 9781137032225 (electronic bk.)
Standard No.: 9786613900241
Source: 550667Palgrave Macmillanhttp://www.palgraveconnect.comSubjects--Topical Terms:
341009
Privacy, Right of.
Index Terms--Genre/Form:
336502
Electronic books.
LC Class. No.: JC596 / .M25 2012
Dewey Class. No.: 323.44/8
Managing privacy through accountability[electronic resource] /
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Surveillance technologies form an increasingly ubiquitous presence in many EU member states. CCTV cameras, traffic regulation systems, ID cards, biometric developments, airport security checks and on-line forms of dataveillance are just some of the many ways in which the public are subject to forms of scrutiny, data collection, data storage and data sharing. These surveillance systems are often welcomed as a means of protection and for easing public fears, but also raise profound questions for democratic states of the nature of the relationship between state and citizenry. Currently, regulation of surveillance systems differs across EU member states, including legal prohibitions, forms of licensing, self-certification, data protection and information or data protection commissioners. Forms of accountability have emerged as one means by which the potential consequences of surveillance systems might be recognised and assessed and formally incorporated into public sector policy or into the ways in which companies do business. Managing Privacy through Accountability draws together contributions from leading figures in the field of surveillance to engage in discussion of the emergence of accountability as a central motif in debates around privacy invasion and privacy protection. It is the first book to engage in this debate.
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