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引用次数: 10
摘要
迄今为止,欧盟数据保护法由每个成员国的独立监管机构以分散的方式进行监督和执行。虽然这些监管机构的独立性是欧盟数据保护法的重要组成部分,但这种分散的治理结构导致了监管机构在适用于数据处理操作的国家法律和负责执行数据保护规则的国家机构方面的相互竞争。这些相互矛盾的主张——从对bb0和Facebook数据保护合规的调查中可以看出——危及了欧盟数据保护制度的目标。新的《通用数据保护条例》(General Data Protection Regulation)将提供一个集中决策机构——欧洲数据保护委员会(European Data Protection Board),从而彻底改变数据保护治理。尽管该机构将确保数据保护法的“欧洲化”,鉴于该委员会权力的性质和范围,它标志着欧盟机构创建过程中的另一个重大转变,因此,也必须在更广泛的欧盟背景下加以考虑。
Abstract EU data protection law has, to date, been monitored and enforced in a decentralised way by independent supervisory authorities in each Member State. While the independence of these supervisory authorities is an essential element of EU data protection law, this decentralised governance structure has led to competing claims from supervisory authorities regarding the national law applicable to a data processing operation and the national authority responsible for enforcing the data protection rules. These competing claims – evident in investigations conducted into the data protection compliance of Google and Facebook – jeopardise the objectives of the EU data protection regime. The new General Data Protection Regulation will revolutionise data protection governance by providing for a centralised decision-making body, the European Data Protection Board. While this agency will ensure the ‘Europeanisation’ of data protection law, given the nature and the extent of this Board’s powers, it marks another significant shift in the EU’s agency-creating process and must, therefore, also be considered in its broader EU context.
期刊介绍:
The Cambridge Yearbook of European Legal Studies (CYELS) offers authors and readers a space for sustained reflection and conversation about the challenges facing Europe and the diverse legal contexts in which those challenges are addressed. It identifies European Legal Studies as a broad field of legal enquiry encompassing not only European Union law but also the law emanating from the Council of Europe; comparative European public and private law; and national law in its interaction with European legal sources. The Yearbook is a publication of the Centre for European Legal Studies, Faculty of Law, University of Cambridge.