Data protection and digital sovereignty post-Brexit
Data protection and digital sovereignty post-Brexit
One of the promises of Brexit was to allow the UK to regain its legislative sovereignty from the EU. However, after Brexit, UK data protection law must remain in line with EU standards in order not to lose the adequacy status that allows personal data to be transferred from the EU. This circumstance generates tensions between the EU, which is committed to preserving its digital sovereignty by ensuring an adequate protection of personal data even beyond its borders, and the UK's ambition to become a champion of the digital economy by adopting an innovative and pro-business legislation in the digital field.
The book analyses the latest legal and policy developments in this context, focusing on data protection but also exploring its intersection with other related regulatory areas, such as artificial intelligence and online safety. Renowned international experts contextualise current regulatory trends and policy proposals to understand whether a new UK model in the field of digital regulation is emerging and to what extent this will exacerbate existing tensions between the UK and the EU.
The book includes an accessible and detailed analysis of the major judicial decisions, laws, and current bills offering an invaluable guide to academics, practitioners, and policymakers navigating the complex issues of cross-border data protection post-Brexit.
Celeste, Edoardo
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Costello, Róisín Á.
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Harbinja, Edina
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Xanthoulis, Napoleon
653ad673-f0ec-42e4-9fdf-0ea87d49779e
7 September 2023
Celeste, Edoardo
a6f62106-051d-4251-98ca-d00d1104712f
Costello, Róisín Á.
7e7aafea-f076-4c70-8f53-1f36bac4a55e
Harbinja, Edina
81d30488-c9ff-43fe-b721-a4173861299b
Xanthoulis, Napoleon
653ad673-f0ec-42e4-9fdf-0ea87d49779e
Celeste, Edoardo, Costello, Róisín Á., Harbinja, Edina and Xanthoulis, Napoleon
(2023)
Data protection and digital sovereignty post-Brexit
,
Hart, 368pp.
Abstract
One of the promises of Brexit was to allow the UK to regain its legislative sovereignty from the EU. However, after Brexit, UK data protection law must remain in line with EU standards in order not to lose the adequacy status that allows personal data to be transferred from the EU. This circumstance generates tensions between the EU, which is committed to preserving its digital sovereignty by ensuring an adequate protection of personal data even beyond its borders, and the UK's ambition to become a champion of the digital economy by adopting an innovative and pro-business legislation in the digital field.
The book analyses the latest legal and policy developments in this context, focusing on data protection but also exploring its intersection with other related regulatory areas, such as artificial intelligence and online safety. Renowned international experts contextualise current regulatory trends and policy proposals to understand whether a new UK model in the field of digital regulation is emerging and to what extent this will exacerbate existing tensions between the UK and the EU.
The book includes an accessible and detailed analysis of the major judicial decisions, laws, and current bills offering an invaluable guide to academics, practitioners, and policymakers navigating the complex issues of cross-border data protection post-Brexit.
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Accepted/In Press date: 2023
Published date: 7 September 2023
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 477709
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/477709
PURE UUID: 3986e48a-550e-4ad3-ab1d-9f159e1fdbc5
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Date deposited: 13 Jun 2023 17:09
Last modified: 01 Mar 2024 03:04
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Contributors
Author:
Edoardo Celeste
Author:
Róisín Á. Costello
Author:
Edina Harbinja
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