The author finds that current approaches invariably link data protection to privacy and often fail to address the structural implications of data processing. He therefore suggests a dualistic approach to data protection: in its individual dimension, data protection aims to protect natural persons and their rights, while the structural dimension protects the democratic society as a whole from the adverse effects of data processing. Using this approach, the full potential of an independent right to data protection can be realized.
Researchers, practitioners and students will find this a valuable resource on the rationales, scope and application of data protection.
Felix Bieker is Legal Researcher at the Office of the Data Protection Commissioner of Schleswig-Holstein (Unabhängiges Landeszentrum für Datenschutz) in Kiel, Germany.
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"The book thus does not merely pursue one research question, but many, and it ends with a conclusion of a more generic, policy-oriented kind ... . interesting contribution - but which is ancillary in relation to the themes of ownership, control and freedom developed above - lies in Bieker's distinction between the right to data protection and the right to privacy." (Jacob Kornbeck, Journal of Data Protection & Privacy, Vol. 6 (4), 2024)