Human Rights 75 years After: Privacy respect in the EU

International Institute for Middle East and Balkan Studies (IFIMES)[1] from Ljubljana, Slovenia, regularly analyses developments in the Middle East, Balkans and also around the world. Nora Wolf isan International Politics & Economics specialist from the Kingston and University of Geneva. The text entitled “Human Rights 75 years After: Privacy respect in the EU” is a brief reference on a speech by well know Australian author and Human Rights activist Dr. Lizzie O’Shea, prepared exclusively for the conference in Vienna.

 

  • Nora WOLF

International Politics & Economics specialist

Human Rights 75 years After:

Privacy respect in the EU

 

Early summer days of 2020 in Vienna sow marking the anniversary of Nuremberg Trials with the conference “From the Victory Day to Corona Disarray: 75 years of Europe’s Collective Security and Human Rights System – Legacy of Antifascism for the Common Pan-European Future”. This was the first public and probably the largest conference in Europe past the early spring lockdown. It gathered numerous speakers and audience physically in the venue while many others attended online.

 

The conference was organised by four partners; the International Institute for Middle East and Balkan Studies (IFIMES), Media Platform Modern Diplomacy, Academic Journal European Perspectives, and Action Platform Culture for Peace, with the support of the Diplomatic Academy of Vienna that hosted the event in a prestigious historical setting.

 

Media partners were diplomatic magazines of several countries, and the academic partners included over 25 universities from all 5 continents, numerous institutes and 2 international organisations. A day-long event was also Live-streamed, that enabled audiences from Chile to Far East and from Canada to Australia to be engaged with panellists in the plenary and via zoom. (the entire conference proceedings are available: https://www.facebook.com/DiplomaticAcademyVienna )

 

Among 20-some speakers from Canada to Australia, talking in three event’s panels was also the well know author and Human Rights activist Dr. Lizzie O’Shea. This text is a brief reference on her highly anticipated and absorbing speech prepared exclusively for this conference.

Lizzie O’Shea addressing the Conference

 

Some argue that with the advent of the numeric age, privacy is dead and the sooner we accept it; the sooner we can all move past our frivolous concerns of personal data misuses and what is really just a reluctance on our part to embrace change. As such, privacy decline and the related loss of control would merely constitute an inevitable consequence of our world’s digitalization.

 

Others seem to think that Europe is at the forefront of the fight to preserve its constituents’ privacy – GDPR, after all, is proof of that. Moreover, article 8 of the ECHR combined with the Court’s evolutionary case-law on the topic are robust safeguards in place ensuring that people’s privacy remains bulletproof and a top priority.

 

While it is true that on the outset Europe has been conceived as a ‘leader’ for its – at the time undoubtedly ground-breaking – Data Protection Regulation Act and other national initiatives stemming from the consolidated efforts of EU institutions, such a crucial multi-dimensional and far-reaching right as privacy requires more steps from each government, we argue here.

 

First, in our ever-fast-changing digital world where privacy is threatened in more ways than we could predict, it is the States’ place to be in the first line of defence:  they shall be responsible but also accountable for the protection – or lack thereof – of their citizens’ privacy. Indeed, State obligations under Human Rights frameworks remain unchanged. That is to respect, protect and fulfil. Needless to say, the heavy and complex task of preserving the integrity of one’s privacy, surely, cannot simply fall onto each and every individual’s shoulders.

 

That being said, if and when governments decide to get more involved and concerned with overall privacy challenges we face, one should also be wary of the risks that empowerment may create. As a result of that mandate, notable concentrations of power in the hands of the State can arise and ought to be managed to prevent abuses and espouse a privacy approach targeting all stakeholders.

 

Lizzie O’Sheal, Human Rights lawyer and writer, effectively underlines some of the shortcomings of the current EU approach to privacy in her intervention during the Vienna Diplomatic Conference of July 2020. More precisely, she hints at the dangers of the current power balance being held by some Governments and the absence of a corresponding amount of accountability. She suggests that this reality is symptomatic of an overwhelming trust of the people in their State leading to an erosion of any culture of criticism. This phenomenon of “complacency”, as O’Sheal phrases it, whilst seemingly perhaps counter-intuitive, is not in fact desirable. Criticism of one’s own government policies – and thereby entertaining public debates on State strategies – is an essential component of militant democracies and an invaluable contribution to checks and balances. Public scrutiny and instigation of democratic forums can go a long way. Most notably, it prevents governments from taking the ‘easy route’ and encourages them to look at alternatives which might be more suitable to people’s priorities and needs.

 

Even more pressing is another consequence derived from the current European States’ penchant for power monopoly in deciding privacy management. Indeed, the latter trend combined to blind trust opens wide the door to state surveillance and abuses. Let us be clear: GDPR is of no help in terms of citizens’ safeguards against governmental intrusions in privacy and abusive use of personal data. This is why it is perhaps high time to remind ourselves that protection of our fundamental right to privacy ought to be guaranteed against businesses, other private parties, and State actions.

 

Another criticism that aims to be constructive for the further shaping of our European approach to privacy is the common restrictive conception of privacy as a B2C relationship. The GDPR’s architecture revolves around the assumption that privacy issues solely regard individual rights, individual situations, and individual informed consent. There is no acknowledgment of, or infrastructures related to, any type of collective dimension. And while there is no question that individual, case-by-case informed consent represents a corner-stone in privacy protection policies, it is also insufficient in view of the overall goal Europe should certainly be pursuing. That is, to build a global online community that respects privacy in its fullest form and features adequate shared liability mechanisms.

 

In sum, the question is the following: should we truly be content with an individualistic-only, corporates are the villains-only plan to counter and mitigate the multiplying threats to our wholesome privacies? Perhaps this will serve as food for thoughts and refuel some welcome public debate on the matter.

 

About the author:

Nora Wolfis a Swiss/based, International Politics & Economics specialist from the Kingston and University of Geneva. Her expertise includes Human Rights, Humanitarian Law and International Criminal Law in an inter-disciplinary fashion for the EU and the UN-related thinktanks and FORAs.

 

Ljubljana/Geneva, 16 September 2020

 

Footnotes:

[1] IFIMES – International Institute for Middle East and Balkan Studies, based in Ljubljana, Slovenia, has Special Consultative status at ECOSOC/UN, New York, since 2018.