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Data protection law in Ireland : sources and issues / Paul Lambert.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Dublin : Clarus Press, 2016.Edition: Second editionDescription: xxx, 644 p. ; 23 cmISBN:
  • 1905536879
  • 9781905536870
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 343.099 LAM
Summary: In 2016, data protection regulation saw the most significant change in over twenty-one years. The Data Protection Directive was replaced in its entirety by the new General Data Protection Regulation. This affects all organizations and all individuals throughout the EU and Ireland. In addition to new and expanded rights and obligations, organizations must also engage Data Protection Officers, whom have significant responsibilities and independence. The second edition of Data Protection Law in Ireland provides a detailed analysis of these new developments, procedures, rights, and obligations of data protection in Ireland. It is the most recent and up-to-date book, providing a comprehensive guide as to what data protection is and the implications and obligations for holders and subjects of such data. This is an essential reference and resource for organizations, companies, solicitors, barristers, Data Protection Officers, compliance officers, IT and security personnel, marketing departments, and those interested in this increasingly important and rapidly changing area of law.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
2 Hour Loan Moylish Library Reserve - Library Issue Desk 343.099 LAM (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 39002100648295
3 Day Loan Moylish Library Short Loan 343.099 LAM (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 39002100633446

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

In 2016, data protection regulation saw the most significant change in over twenty-one years. The Data Protection Directive was replaced in its entirety by the new General Data Protection Regulation. This affects all organizations and all individuals throughout the EU and Ireland. In addition to new and expanded rights and obligations, organizations must also engage Data Protection Officers, whom have significant responsibilities and independence. The second edition of Data Protection Law in Ireland provides a detailed analysis of these new developments, procedures, rights, and obligations of data protection in Ireland. It is the most recent and up-to-date book, providing a comprehensive guide as to what data protection is and the implications and obligations for holders and subjects of such data. This is an essential reference and resource for organizations, companies, solicitors, barristers, Data Protection Officers, compliance officers, IT and security personnel, marketing departments, and those interested in this increasingly important and rapidly changing area of law. [Subject: Irish Law, Data Protection, Information Technology]

In 2016, data protection regulation saw the most significant change in over twenty-one years. The Data Protection Directive was replaced in its entirety by the new General Data Protection Regulation. This affects all organizations and all individuals throughout the EU and Ireland. In addition to new and expanded rights and obligations, organizations must also engage Data Protection Officers, whom have significant responsibilities and independence. The second edition of Data Protection Law in Ireland provides a detailed analysis of these new developments, procedures, rights, and obligations of data protection in Ireland. It is the most recent and up-to-date book, providing a comprehensive guide as to what data protection is and the implications and obligations for holders and subjects of such data. This is an essential reference and resource for organizations, companies, solicitors, barristers, Data Protection Officers, compliance officers, IT and security personnel, marketing departments, and those interested in this increasingly important and rapidly changing area of law.

Table of contents provided by Syndetics

  • Abbreviations (p. xix)
  • Table of Legislation (p. xxi)
  • Table of Statutory Instruments (p. xxiii)
  • Table of European/International Legislation (p. xxv)
  • WP29/EDPB (p. xxvii)
  • Table of Cases (p. xxix)
  • Part 1 Data Protection
  • 1 Data Protection (p. 3)
  • 2 The Definitions of Data Protection (p. 39)
  • 3 Instruments of Data Protection (p. 55)
  • 4 Data Protection Principles (p. 69)
  • 5 Processing Pre-Conditions: The Prior Information Requirements (p. 75)
  • 6 Legitimate Processing Conditions (p. 85)
  • 7 Exemptions (p. 91)
  • 8 Individual Data Subject Rights (p. 105)
  • 9 Notification and Registration (p. 135)
  • 10 Enforcement and Penalties for Non-Compliance (p. 139)
  • 11 Security of Personal Data (p. 175)
  • 12 Outsourcing and Processors (p. 205)
  • Part 2 The New Data Protection Regime
  • 13 The New Data Protection Regime Introduced (p. 219)
  • 14 Background and Context (p. 235)
  • 15 Rules and Issues (p. 271)
  • 16 Reaction to New Regulation (p. 301)
  • 17 The New Regime in Details (p. 309)
  • 18 New Data Protection Officer (p. 351)
  • 19 Security and Data Breach (p. 359)
  • 20 Data Protection Impact Assessment (p. 365)
  • 21 Privacy by Design, Data Protection by Design, Data Protection as Default (p. 375)
  • Part 3 Organisations and Inward-Facing Obligations
  • 22 Processing Employee Personal Data (p. 383)
  • 23 Employee Data Protection Rights (p. 411)
  • 24 Employee Considerations (p. 425)
  • 25 Case Studies (p. 447)
  • Part 4 Organisations and Outward-Facing Obligations
  • 26 Outward-Facing Issues (p. 499)
  • 27 Outward-Facing Rights (p. 519)
  • 28 Outward-Facing Data Protection by Design and by Default (p. 523)
  • 29 ePrivacy and Electronic Communications (p. 533)
  • 30 Cookies and Electronic Communications (p. 549)
  • 31 Electronic Direct Marketing and Spam (p. 553)
  • 32 Cross-Border Transfers of Personal Data (p. 563)
  • 33 Case Studies (p. 587)
  • Part 5 New Issues
  • 34 New Issues (p. 607)
  • Appendices (p. 613)
  • Reference (p. 613)
  • Legislation (p. 613)
  • Resources (p. 615)
  • Index (p. 631)

Author notes provided by Syndetics

Dr Paul Lambert, BA, LLB, LLM, PhD, qualified solicitor, CTM Attorney, Adjunct Lecturer and Consultant, editor of Social Networking; Law, Rights and Policy and author of UK texts on Data Protection Law.

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