This chapter focuses on the international right to privacy and national security surveillance by spy agencies. It assesses the extent to which the law of the United States and Europe (EU and ECtHR) afford extraterritorial protection for the right to privacy, in furtherance of the international human right to privacy. The chapter concludes that U.S. law draws a stark line between insiders (U.S. citizens and permanent residents) and outsiders, and affords significantly more protection for insiders. On the European side, even though the EU does not have jurisdiction internally over spy agencies, it does have the power to regulate foreign access to EU personal data. The four EU-U.S. agreements in place that govern the U.S. intelligence communit...
This chapter examines attitudes towards national diversity in one piece of the emerging European ...
This chapter examines attitudes towards national diversity in one piece of the emerging European ...
This article analyzes the past twenty years of data privacy disputes between the European Union and ...
This chapter focuses on the international right to privacy and national security surveillance by spy...
The article considers the feasibility of the adoption by the Council of Europe Member States of a mu...
This article analyzes the past twenty years of data privacy disputes between the European Union and ...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of a book chapter published by Routledge in Data Politics: Worlds, Su...
Antiterrorism intelligence sharing across national borders has been trumpeted as one of the most pro...
Everyone has the right to demand respect for their privacy (private life). Hence, this right has bee...
The tensions between transnational data exchange by police authorities as well as intelligence agenc...
The article introduces the theme of the protection of the right to privacy in a world characterized ...
The thesis titled, Cyberspace, Surveillance, Law and Privacy analyses the implications of state spon...
Whilst the political dust on mass surveillance is slowly settling down, what has become apparent is...
The motivation for this dissertation is the balancing act the European Court of Human Rights is curr...
While core principles for the fair treatment of personal information are common to democracies, priv...
This chapter examines attitudes towards national diversity in one piece of the emerging European ...
This chapter examines attitudes towards national diversity in one piece of the emerging European ...
This article analyzes the past twenty years of data privacy disputes between the European Union and ...
This chapter focuses on the international right to privacy and national security surveillance by spy...
The article considers the feasibility of the adoption by the Council of Europe Member States of a mu...
This article analyzes the past twenty years of data privacy disputes between the European Union and ...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of a book chapter published by Routledge in Data Politics: Worlds, Su...
Antiterrorism intelligence sharing across national borders has been trumpeted as one of the most pro...
Everyone has the right to demand respect for their privacy (private life). Hence, this right has bee...
The tensions between transnational data exchange by police authorities as well as intelligence agenc...
The article introduces the theme of the protection of the right to privacy in a world characterized ...
The thesis titled, Cyberspace, Surveillance, Law and Privacy analyses the implications of state spon...
Whilst the political dust on mass surveillance is slowly settling down, what has become apparent is...
The motivation for this dissertation is the balancing act the European Court of Human Rights is curr...
While core principles for the fair treatment of personal information are common to democracies, priv...
This chapter examines attitudes towards national diversity in one piece of the emerging European ...
This chapter examines attitudes towards national diversity in one piece of the emerging European ...
This article analyzes the past twenty years of data privacy disputes between the European Union and ...