Product details
- Categories: GDPR & Data Protection
- Publisher: OUP - Oxford University Press
- ISBN: 9780192870339
- Publication Date: 21/04/2023
- Binding: Paperback
- Number of pages: 304
- Language: English
Summary
Vulnerability has traditionally been viewed through the lens of specific
groups of people, such as ethnic minorities, children, the elderly, or
people with disabilities. With the rise of digital media, our
perceptions of vulnerable groups and individuals have been reshaped as
new vulnerabilities and different vulnerable sub-groups of users,
consumers, citizens, and data subjects emerge.
Vulnerability and Data Protection Law
not only depicts these problems but offers the reader a detailed
investigation of the concept of data subjects and a reconceptualization
of the notion of vulnerability within the General Data Protection
Regulation. The regulation offers a forward-facing set of tools
that-though largely underexplored-are essential in rebalancing power
asymmetries and mitigating induced vulnerabilities in the age of
artificial intelligence.
Considering the new risks and
potentialities of the digital market, the new awareness about cognitive
weaknesses, and the new philosophical sensitivity about the condition of
human vulnerability, the author looks for a more general and layered
definition of the data subject's vulnerability that goes beyond
traditional labels. In doing so, he seeks to promote a
'vulnerability-aware' interpretation of the GDPR.
A heuristic
analysis that re-interprets the whole GDPR, this work is essential for
both scholars of data protection law and for policymakers looking to
strengthen regulations and protect the data of vulnerable individuals.
Table of contents
1:Introduction: The reasons for research on data subjects
2:The notion of data subject: an average individual?
3:Who is the vulnerable individual?
4:The vulnerable data subject in the GDPR
5:Data protection principles and vulnerable data subjects
6:Data protection rights and duties and vulnerable data subjects
7:Assessing (and mitigating) layers of data subjects' vulnerability: Using the DPIA as a Model
8:The limitations and the alternatives of a vulnerability-based interpretation of the GDPR
9:Conclusions: The layers of data subject's vulnerability and the way ahead