Two Concepts of Information in the GDPR

Event date
24 November 2020
Event time
12:30 - 13:45
Oxford week
Audience
Anyone
Venue
Zoom Webinar
Speaker(s)
Dara Hallinan

Notes & Changes

Register here. Please note that this event will be recorded, with the exception of any live audience questions.

Information is a central concept in information privacy law. This is unsurprising. Information is the substance which provides the rationale for the existence of the area of law. Yet, there is no clear definition of information in primary or secondary legislation or jurisprudence. This talk aims to add to the granularity of understanding of the concept of information in data privacy law and, taking the GDPR as its focus, advances the following thesis: There are two different roles for the concept of information in the GPDR, the substantive boundaries of the concepts populating these roles differ and these differences are significant for the efficacy of the GDPR in protecting individuals' rights. 

An audio recording of this event is available to listen to on Soundcloud

Dara Hallinan is a legal academic working at FIZ Karlsruhe. His specific focus is on the interaction between law, new technologies – particularly ICT and biotech – and society. He studied law in the UK and Germany, completed a Master’s in Human Rights and Democracy in Italy and Estonia and wrote his PhD at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel on the better regulation of genetic privacy in biobanks and genomic research through data protection law. He is also programme director for the annual Computers, Privacy and Data Protection conference and editor of the bi-weekly Data Protection Insider.

Oliver Butler will be the respondent. He is currently the Fellow in Law at Wadham College, covering a period of leave taken by Dr Tarun Khaitan, Tutorial Fellow in Law at Wadham College. Oliver studied law as an undergraduate at Emmanuel College, Cambridge before completing his BCL at Lincoln College, Oxford and LLM at Harvard Law School. He was called to the Bar in 2013 and worked at the Law Commission as a research assistant before returning to Emmanuel for a PhD on information law. His research at the Bonavero Institute of Human Rights looks into justifications for regulating public authorities differently from private actors in relation to privacy, confidentiality and data protection.

Logo of the Price Media Law Moot.

This event forms a part of the repertoire of International Events Around the Moot for the participants, judges and coaches of the Price Media Law Moot Court Competition 2020/21. Please remember to register in order to access the event.

Found within

Human Rights Law