Content area

Abstract

Data protection has always been linked to privacy in such a way that it is very difficult to assess its very notion, its purpose, and its value without falling back to privacy. The entry into force of the Lisbon Treaty on 1 December 2009 marked a historic moment for data protection: the right was elevated to the status of a fundamental right within the EU legal order, alongside the right to privacy. This article discusses the shortcomings of the current theories and the existing case law of the ECJ on data protection and argues that data protection should be reconstructed in order to operate as a fully-fledged fundamental right next to the right to privacy. Two conditions are necessary for this: First, a core or essence of the right to data protection should be recognized. Second, infringements of the right to data protection should be determined solely on the basis of the relevant data protection principles themselves without the need to recourse to the right to privacy.

Details

Title
Data protection as a fundamental right next to privacy? 'Reconstructing' a not so new right
Author
Tzanou, Maria
Pages
88 - 99
Publication year
2013
Publication date
May 2013
Publisher
Oxford Publishing Limited (England)
ISSN
20443994
e-ISSN
20444001
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1553722336
Copyright
Copyright Oxford Publishing Limited(England) May 2013