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Information Rights: A Practitioner's Guide to Data Protection, Freedom of Information and Other Information Rights

Autor Philip Coppel KC
en Limba Engleză Quantity pack – 6 sep 2023
"An essential addition to the bookshelf of any practitioner who has to consider information rights, however often. The book is the best kind of practitioner text: practical and clear, but also scholarly, thoughtful and analytical." (Sarah Hannett KC, Judicial Review)Retaining the position it has held since first publication, this is the 6th edition of the leading practitioner text on all aspects of information law. The latest edition includes a substantially enlarged set of chapters on appeals, enforcement, and remedies, as well as covering over 250 new judgments and decisions published since the last edition.Information Rights has been cited by the Supreme Court, Court of Appeal and the Tribunals, and is used by practitioners, judges and all those who practise in the field, including journalists. The new edition maintains its style of succinct statements of principle, supported by case law, legislative provisions, and statutory guidance.The work is divided into 2 volumes. Volume 1 is a 1,500-page commentary, with a comprehensive coverage of the data protection regime, freedom of information and environmental information law, as well as other rights of access to official information such as local government legislation and the Public Records Act. There is detailed coverage of appeal and regulatory procedures. Volume 2 comprises extensive annotated statutory material, including the DPA 2018, the UK GDPR, FOIA, Tribunal rules and statutory guidance.Contributors: James Findlay KC, Olivia Davies, John Fitzsimons, Richard Hanstock and Dr Christina Lienen (all of Cornerstone Barristers); Antony White KC, Sarah Hannett KC, Sara Mansoori KC and Aidan Wills (all of Matrix Chambers); Aidan Eardley KC and Clara Hamer (both of 5RB); Rupert Bowers KC and Martin Westgate KC (both of Doughty Street Chambers); Henry King KC and Bankim Thanki KC (both of Fountain Court Chambers); James Maurici KC and Jacqueline Lean (both of Landmark Chambers); Gemma White KC (Blackstone Chambers); Oliver Sanders KC (1 Crown Office Row); Saima Hanif KC (3VB); Jennifer Thelen (39 Essex Chambers); and Simon McKay (McKay Law).
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781509967308
ISBN-10: 1509967303
Dimensiuni: 175 x 250 x 82 mm
Greutate: 3 kg
Ediția:6
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Hart Publishing
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Caracteristici

Comprehensive coverage of the data protection regime, freedom of information and environmental information law, local government legislation and the Public Records Act

Notă biografică

Philip Coppel KC has practised in the area of Information Rights for over 20 years and has appeared in many of its leading cases.

Cuprins

PrefaceTable of CasesGlossaryPart I: Overview1. Introduction2. Westminster Legislation3. Scottish Legislation4. The Influence of the European Convention on Human Rights5. Exemptions: General Principles6. Prejudice and the Public InterestPart II: Data Protection7. Data Protection: Introduction8. UK GDPR and DPA 2018: Introduction9. General Processing: Continuing Obligations10. General Processing: Data Subject Rights11. General Processing: Exemptions etc.12. Law Enforcement Processing: Continuing Obligations13. Law Enforcement Processing: Data Subject Rights14. Intelligence Services Processing15. DPA 1998: Concepts, Rights and Duties16. DPA 1998: ExemptionsPart III: Environmental Information17. Environmental Information: Introduction18. Environmental Information: Rights and Appeals19. Environmental Information: ExceptionsPart IV: Freedom of Information20. The Right to Information21. The Duty to Advise and Assist, Codes of Practice and Publication Schemes22. The Request23. Disentitlement24. The ResponsePart V: Exemptions25. Information Otherwise Accessible26. Security Bodies, National Security and Defence27. International and Internal Relations28. Economic and Financial Interests29. Investigation, Audit, Law Enforcement and the Courts30. Privilege31. Policy Formulation and Public Affairs32. Research, Health and Safety33. Personal Information34. Commercial and Other Confidentiality35. Miscellaneous ExemptionsPart VI: Other Rights to Information36. Historical Records and Public Records37. Local Government Documents38. Medical Records39. Business and Financial Information40. Educational Information41. Common Law Rights and Controls42. Court-held Documents43. Information held by EU BodiesPart VII: Appeals, Remedies and Enforcement44. Information Commissioners45. Tribunals: Practice and Procedure46. FOIA and EIR: Appeals47. FOI(S)A and EI(S)R: Appeals48. Freedom of Information: Regulatory Enforcement etc.49. Data Protection: Private Law Remedies50. Data Protection: Regulatory Enforcement51. Data Protection: Special Situation52. DPA 1998: Personal Remedies and Regulatory Enforcement53. Warrants and OffencesIndex

Recenzii

The book is well-structured and clearly signposted, which helps the reader locate specific details without becoming unwillingly submerged in the complexities of the field. It therefore works on two levels: as a thorough map of the information rights landscape in the UK . and also a methodical introduction to many sometimes arcane areas. Because of this, it is both a useful volume for the specialist and also accessible to those not steeped in the topic. Written with evident relish for the subject, this is an admirably holistic treatment of the ever-expanding, complex but never more important field of information law and the accompanying rights.
For law students, and information governance professionals alike, these beautiful weighty tomes are a must-have addition to their information rights library of seminal textbooks, but they also make a supremely useful practitioner's handbook.
Information Rights shines a clear and authoritative light on the law's labyrinthine structure and unfamiliar concepts . With its crisp statements of principle, supported by footnoted sources, the book makes light work of a heavy topic . Philip Coppel and his team of contributors deserve both congratulations and gratitude.
Methodically laid out, easy to follow and contains ample references to the primary material where necessary . Overall this book provides an engaging and comprehensive review of the various ways in which information rights arise and can be challenged.