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Data Protection and Interoperability in EU External Relations: Guaranteeing Global Data Transfers in the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice: Studies in EU External Relations, cartea 24

Autor Francesca Tassinari
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 31 oct 2024
This book assesses whether the implementation of transborder interoperable solutions aligns with the European Union's standards and rules on personal data transfer. It specifically examines the principles and values enshrined in the founding Treaties that steer the EU’s external activities as a global actor. It will help you understand the privacy and data protection standards the EU must uphold when pursuing its objectives of freedom, security, and justice externally. You’ll learn about the limits on the processing of personal data by large-scale IT systems in the areas of freedom, security, and justice, and explore the full scope of the 2019 interoperability regulations, n. 817 and 818. Also, the volume offers a series of diagrams, tables, and figures that will make your reading as smooth as possible.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789004684003
ISBN-10: 900468400X
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill | Nijhoff
Seria Studies in EU External Relations


Notă biografică

Francesca Tassinari>, Ph.D. (2022), is a research fellow at the Public Law Department of the University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU) working on sensitive and big data from an international law perspective. As a lawyer, she served the Digital Schengen Unit of the European Commission during 2020-2021 and 2022-2023.

Cuprins

Preface

List of Illustrations

Abbreviations

The External Reach of Interoperability in the European Union’s Area of Freedom, Security and Justice An Introduction
1 Background

2 Objective and Research Questions

3 Legal Framework

4 Preliminary Remarks

5 Previous Studies and Current Situation

6 Methodology

7 Structure


part 1
1The Elaboration of Data Protection Standards in International Privacy Law The European Human-Centric Approach to Digital Technology
1 Introduction

2 The United Nations’ Delayed, Soft Response to Technology Challenges

3 The Right to Respect for Private and Family Life and the Council of Europe’s Convention 108
3.1The Scope of Convention 108 and Its Regime on Transborder Data Flows

3.2It is Time to Modernise Convention 108: Convention 108+


4 Other Soft, Privacy Law Frameworks: Privacy Interoperability

5 Conclusion


2The European Union as a Normative Power in the Field of Personal Data Protection A New Reading of the European Union’s Regime on Personal Data Transfers
1 Introduction

2 A Non-European Union’s Competence on the Protection of Personal Data
2.1The European Community’s Data Protection Directive

2.2The European Union’s Data Protection Framework Decision


3 A European Union’s Fundamental (Human?) Right to the Protection of Personal Data
3.1Data Protection as a New Supranational Fundamental Right under Union’s Law

3.2The Codification of Principles and Rights to Protect Personal Data (and their Limits) in the European Union


4 The Provision of a European Union’s Competence Based on Article 16(2) of the tfeu
4.1The Characteristics of the Union’s Competence Based on Article 16(2) of the tfeu

4.2The European Union’s External (Implied) Competence Based on Article 16(2) of the tfeu


5 Conclusion


3The European Union’s Clause on Privacy and Data Protection in International Agreements Conditioning Personal Data Transfers to the European Union’s Human Rights System
1 Introduction

2 The European Union’s Association Agreements
2.1The European Union’s Stabilisation and Association Agreements

2.2The Euro-Mediterranean Association Agreements

2.3Other European Union’s Association Agreements


3 The European Union’s Cooperation Agreements
3.1The European Union’s Trade Agreements

3.2Trade and Cooperation Agreements

3.3Partnership and Cooperation Agreements

3.4Cooperation and Development Agreements

3.5Trade, Development, and Cooperation Agreements

3.6Economic Partnership, Political Coordination, and Cooperation Agreements


4 The Clause on Data Protection in the European Union’s Freedom, Security and Justice Agreements
4.1The European Union’s Agreements on Migration, Asylum, and Visa

4.2The European Union’s Agreements on Police and Judicial Cooperation in Criminal Matters


5 Conclusion


Part 2
4The Processing of Personal Data within the European Union’s Large-Scale it Systems Weighting Data Protection Rights in the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice
1 Introduction

2 The Schengen Information System (sis)
2.1From the First to the Second Generation of the sis

2.2A “Second” Second Generation of the sis


3 The European Asylum Dactyloscopy Database (Eurodac)
3.1The 2013 Eurodac Recast Regulation

3.2The 2016 Eurodac Recast Proposal

3.3The 2020 Amended Eurodac Recast Proposal


4 The Visa Information System (vis)
4.1The vis Regulation

4.2The vis lea Decision

4.3The vis Revised Regulation


5 The Entry/Exit System (ees)
5.1The 2008 Proposals on the ees and the Registered Traveller Programme

5.2The 2017 Regulation on the Establishment of the ees


6 The European Travel Information and Authorisation System (etias)
6.1The Choice of the Correct Legal Basis

6.2The Categories of Personal Data

6.3The Rules on the Protection of Personal Data

6.4The Procedure for Issuing a European Travel Authorisation


7 The European Criminal Records Information System for Third-Country Nationals (ecris-tcn)
7.1The European Information System on Criminal Records (ecris)

7.2The ecris-tcn Regulation


8 Conclusion


5The Interoperability between Large-Scale it Systems in the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice Context, Content, and Purposes of Regulations (EU) 817 and 818 of 2019
1 Introduction

2 Historical Background
2.1Interoperability in the Aftermath of 11-S

2.2The Adoption of the Interoperability Package


3 The Range of the Interoperability Framework
3.1Interoperability in-between the Schengen Acquis and the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice

3.2A New it Infrastructure for Large-Scale it Systems: The Interoperability’s Components

3.3Interoperability’s Own Objectives

3.4Measures Supporting Interoperability


4 Conclusion


6Global Interoperability for the European Union’s Freedom, Security and Justice Purposes Sharing Personal Data Stored in, Processed, or Accessed by the Interoperability Components
1 Introduction

2 Global Interoperability in the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice

3 The External Dimension of Large-Scale it Systems
3.1The Communication of Personal Data for Borders, Visas, Asylum, and Migration Purposes

3.2The Communication of Personal Data for Police and Judicial Cooperation in Criminal Matters Purposes


4 The Processing of Personal Data, Including Its Transfer, by Europol
4.1The Europol Information System

4.2The Transfer of Personal Data through the Europol’s Operational Agreements

4.3The Transfer of Personal Data through Adequacy Decisions, International Agreements, and Administrative Arrangements

4.4The Exchange of Personal Data with Private Parties


5 Interoperability with Interpol’s Databases
5.1Issues Stemming from Interpol’s Red Notices

5.2Consultation of Interpol’s Databases

5.3Toward a Cooperation Agreement between the European Union and Interpol


6 Conclusion


Conclusions


References

Index