Privacy Impact Assessment
Virtually all organisations collect, use, process and share personal data from their employees, customers and/or citizens. In doing so, they may be exposing themselves to risks, from threats and vulnerabilities, of that data being breached or compromised by negligent or wayward employees, hackers, t...
Corporate Author: | |
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Other Authors: | , |
Format: | Electronic eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Dordrecht :
Springer Netherlands : Imprint: Springer,
2012.
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Series: | Law, Governance and Technology Series ;
6 |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Full Text via HEAL-Link |
Table of Contents:
- Foreword by Gary Marx
- Part 1 Setting the Scene.- 1 – Introduction to privacy impact assessment; David Wright and Paul de Hert.- 2 – A human rights perspective on privacy and data protection impact assessments; Paul de Hert.- 3 – (Regulatory) impact assessment and better regulation; David Parker.- 4 – Prior checking, a forerunner to privacy impact assessments; Gwendal Le Grand and Emilie Barrau.- Part 2 Five Countries Lead the Way
- 5 – PIAs in Australia: A work-in-progress report; Roger Clarke.- 6 – Privacy impact assessment – Great potential not often realised; Nigel Waters.- 7 – Privacy impact assessments in Canada; Robin Bayley and Colin Bennett.- 8 – PIA in New Zealand; John Edwards.- 9 – Privacy impact assessment in the UK; Adam Warren and Andrew Charlesworth.- 10 – PIA requirements and privacy decision-making in US government agencies; Kenneth Bamberger and Deirdre Mulligan.- Part 3 PIA in the Private Sector: Three Examples
- 11 – PIA: Cornerstone of privacy compliance in Nokia; Tobias Bräutigam.- 12 – How Siemens assesses privacy impacts; Florian Thoma.- 13 – Vodafone’s approach to privacy impact assessments; Stephen Deadman and Amanda Chandler.- Part 4 Specialisesd PIA: the Cases of the Financial Services Indusrty and the RFID PIA Framwork
- 14 – The ISO PIA standard for financial services; Martin Ferris.- 15 – The RFID PIA – developed by industry, agreed by regulators; Sarah Spiekermann.- 16 – Double-take: getting to the RFID PIA Framework; Laurent Beslay and Anne-Christine Lacoste.- Part 5 Specific Issues
- 17 – Surveillance: extending the limits of privacy impact assessment; Charles Raab and David Wright.- 18 – The Madrid Resolution and prospects for transnational PIAs; Artemi Rallo Lombarte.- 19 – Privacy and ethical impact assessment; David Wright and Emilio Mordini.- 20 – Auditing privacy impact assessments: the Canadian experience; Jennifer Stoddart.- 21 – Privacy impact assessment: Optimising the regulator’s role; Blair Stewart.- 22 – Conclusion: Findings and recommendations; David Wright and Paul de Hert
- About the Authors
- References
- Index.