Book contents
- Transatlantic Jurisdictional Conflicts in Data Protection Law
- Transatlantic Jurisdictional Conflicts in Data Protection Law
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Author’s Note
- Table of Cases
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Conceptual Approaches to Data Protection in the European Union and the United States
- 3 The European Union’s Obligations to Safeguard the Fundamental Right to Data Protection Extraterritorially
- 4 Limits That Public International Law Poses on the European Union Safeguarding the Fundamental Right to Data Protection Extraterritorially
- 5 Ways to Mitigate Problematic Jurisdictional Overreach
- 6 The Reach of European Union Data Protection Law in Transatlantic Data Transfers for Counterterrorism Purposes
- 7 Data Protection and the Free Flow of Information
- 8 Enabling Transatlantic Trade and Protecting Privacy through Cross-Border Data Transfer Agreements
- 9 The Normative External Effects of the European Union’s Exercise of Extraterritorial Jurisdiction in Data Protection Law
- 10 Conclusion
- Select Bibliography
- Index
4 - Limits That Public International Law Poses on the European Union Safeguarding the Fundamental Right to Data Protection Extraterritorially
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 April 2023
- Transatlantic Jurisdictional Conflicts in Data Protection Law
- Transatlantic Jurisdictional Conflicts in Data Protection Law
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Author’s Note
- Table of Cases
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Conceptual Approaches to Data Protection in the European Union and the United States
- 3 The European Union’s Obligations to Safeguard the Fundamental Right to Data Protection Extraterritorially
- 4 Limits That Public International Law Poses on the European Union Safeguarding the Fundamental Right to Data Protection Extraterritorially
- 5 Ways to Mitigate Problematic Jurisdictional Overreach
- 6 The Reach of European Union Data Protection Law in Transatlantic Data Transfers for Counterterrorism Purposes
- 7 Data Protection and the Free Flow of Information
- 8 Enabling Transatlantic Trade and Protecting Privacy through Cross-Border Data Transfer Agreements
- 9 The Normative External Effects of the European Union’s Exercise of Extraterritorial Jurisdiction in Data Protection Law
- 10 Conclusion
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Under public international law, a State has a right to exercise jurisdiction. States are expected to show restraint when attempting to regulate a situation with foreign elements. The research outlines territory- and personality-based permissive principles of jurisdiction. EU data protection provisions that lend themselves to extraterritorial application fall into the subjective territoriality, objective territoriality, passive personality, effects doctrine and potentially protective principles of jurisdiction. The provisions do not come under any one of these principles, but rather an interpretation of several of them. The applicable law articles in the General Data Protection Regulation could most plausibly constitute the objective territoriality (where an act is terminated) and passive personality (the nationality of a victim) principles. Whilst there appears to be a shift from territory to personality, for example, by referring to data processing in the context of activities ‘in the Union’ or individuals ‘subject to the jurisdiction of’ rather than data processing in the context of the activities ‘on the territory of a Member State’ or ‘in the territory of’ each state party’, to justify the exercise of jurisdiction, territory is still necessary to trigger the application of jurisdiction in the online sphere.
Keywords
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Transatlantic Jurisdictional Conflicts in Data Protection LawFundamental Rights, Privacy and Extraterritoriality, pp. 57 - 94Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023