Much legal and technical scholarship discusses the differing views of the United States and European Union toward privacy concepts and regulation. A substantial amount of effort in recent years, in both research and policy, focuses on attempting to reconcile these viewpoints searching for a common framework with a common level of protection for citizens from both sides of Atlantic. Reconciliation, we argue, misunderstands the nature of the challenge facing effective cross-border data flows. No such reconciliation can usually occur without abdication of some sovereign authority of nations, which would require the adoption of an international agreement with typical tools of international law. In this Article, we explore an alternative means to achieve effective data interchange governance among the Western nations, arguing that the focus for addressing privacy issues created in cross-border data flows should instead be procedural, rather than substantive. Beginning with the observation that both U.S. and E.U. cultures share a common fear of “chilling effects” infringing various rights to privacy, we link the differences in privacy fears to the comparative views of the role of the state. These differences are instructive in that while they limit the potential for substantive harmonization of privacy goals, they also create substantial opportunity for procedural harmonization. Such procedural harmonization would afford many benefits, reducing transaction costs for multi-national organizations and increasing the probability that individuals can express (and rely upon implementation) of their privacy preferences The result is a system we describe as Market-Supervised Regulatory Delegation, in which the substantive differences among nations can be respected and implemented in an international market for expressing privacy preferences that is not distorted by the overhead of competing compliance regimes.

Ancient Worries and Modern Fears : Different Roots and Common Effects of U.S. and E.U. Privacy Regulation / P. Perri, D. Thaw. - In: CONNECTICUT LAW REVIEW. - ISSN 0010-6151. - 49:5(2017 Sep), pp. 1623-1656.

Ancient Worries and Modern Fears : Different Roots and Common Effects of U.S. and E.U. Privacy Regulation

P. Perri;
2017

Abstract

Much legal and technical scholarship discusses the differing views of the United States and European Union toward privacy concepts and regulation. A substantial amount of effort in recent years, in both research and policy, focuses on attempting to reconcile these viewpoints searching for a common framework with a common level of protection for citizens from both sides of Atlantic. Reconciliation, we argue, misunderstands the nature of the challenge facing effective cross-border data flows. No such reconciliation can usually occur without abdication of some sovereign authority of nations, which would require the adoption of an international agreement with typical tools of international law. In this Article, we explore an alternative means to achieve effective data interchange governance among the Western nations, arguing that the focus for addressing privacy issues created in cross-border data flows should instead be procedural, rather than substantive. Beginning with the observation that both U.S. and E.U. cultures share a common fear of “chilling effects” infringing various rights to privacy, we link the differences in privacy fears to the comparative views of the role of the state. These differences are instructive in that while they limit the potential for substantive harmonization of privacy goals, they also create substantial opportunity for procedural harmonization. Such procedural harmonization would afford many benefits, reducing transaction costs for multi-national organizations and increasing the probability that individuals can express (and rely upon implementation) of their privacy preferences The result is a system we describe as Market-Supervised Regulatory Delegation, in which the substantive differences among nations can be respected and implemented in an international market for expressing privacy preferences that is not distorted by the overhead of competing compliance regimes.
English
Privacy; Data Protection; U.S.; E.U.
Settore IUS/20 - Filosofia del Diritto
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
set-2017
University of Connecticut Law Review
49
5
1623
1656
34
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
NON aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Ancient Worries and Modern Fears : Different Roots and Common Effects of U.S. and E.U. Privacy Regulation / P. Perri, D. Thaw. - In: CONNECTICUT LAW REVIEW. - ISSN 0010-6151. - 49:5(2017 Sep), pp. 1623-1656.
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P. Perri, D. Thaw
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/542504
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