Biobanking Across Europe Post-GDPR: A Deliberately Fragmented Landscape

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Standard

Biobanking Across Europe Post-GDPR : A Deliberately Fragmented Landscape. / Tzortzatou, Olga ; Slokenberga, Santa ; Reichel, Jane ; da Costa Andrade, Andreia ; Barbosa, Carla ; Bekaert, Sofie ; van Veen, Evert-Ben ; Romeo-Casabona, Carlos M. ; Ó Cathaoir, Katharina; Chassang, Gauthier ; Debucquoy, Annelies ; Derèze, Jean-Jacques ; Dollé, Laurent ; Eaker Fält, Sonja; Halouzka, Radek ; Hartlev, Mette; Hisbergues, Michael ; Hoppe, Nils .

GDPR and Biobanking. ed. / Olga Tzortzatou; Santa Slokenberga; Jane Reichel. Springer, 2021. p. 397-419 (Law, Governance and Technology Series).

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Tzortzatou, O, Slokenberga, S, Reichel, J, da Costa Andrade, A, Barbosa, C, Bekaert, S, van Veen, E-B, Romeo-Casabona, CM, Ó Cathaoir, K, Chassang, G, Debucquoy, A, Derèze, J-J, Dollé, L, Eaker Fält, S, Halouzka, R, Hartlev, M, Hisbergues, M & Hoppe, N 2021, Biobanking Across Europe Post-GDPR: A Deliberately Fragmented Landscape. in O Tzortzatou, S Slokenberga & J Reichel (eds), GDPR and Biobanking. Springer, Law, Governance and Technology Series, pp. 397-419. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-49388-2_22

APA

Tzortzatou, O., Slokenberga, S., Reichel, J., da Costa Andrade, A., Barbosa, C., Bekaert, S., van Veen, E-B., Romeo-Casabona, C. M., Ó Cathaoir, K., Chassang, G., Debucquoy, A., Derèze, J-J., Dollé, L., Eaker Fält, S., Halouzka, R., Hartlev, M., Hisbergues, M., & Hoppe, N. (2021). Biobanking Across Europe Post-GDPR: A Deliberately Fragmented Landscape. In O. Tzortzatou, S. Slokenberga, & J. Reichel (Eds.), GDPR and Biobanking (pp. 397-419). Springer. Law, Governance and Technology Series https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-49388-2_22

Vancouver

Tzortzatou O, Slokenberga S, Reichel J, da Costa Andrade A, Barbosa C, Bekaert S et al. Biobanking Across Europe Post-GDPR: A Deliberately Fragmented Landscape. In Tzortzatou O, Slokenberga S, Reichel J, editors, GDPR and Biobanking. Springer. 2021. p. 397-419. (Law, Governance and Technology Series). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-49388-2_22

Author

Tzortzatou, Olga ; Slokenberga, Santa ; Reichel, Jane ; da Costa Andrade, Andreia ; Barbosa, Carla ; Bekaert, Sofie ; van Veen, Evert-Ben ; Romeo-Casabona, Carlos M. ; Ó Cathaoir, Katharina ; Chassang, Gauthier ; Debucquoy, Annelies ; Derèze, Jean-Jacques ; Dollé, Laurent ; Eaker Fält, Sonja ; Halouzka, Radek ; Hartlev, Mette ; Hisbergues, Michael ; Hoppe, Nils . / Biobanking Across Europe Post-GDPR : A Deliberately Fragmented Landscape. GDPR and Biobanking. editor / Olga Tzortzatou ; Santa Slokenberga ; Jane Reichel. Springer, 2021. pp. 397-419 (Law, Governance and Technology Series).

Bibtex

@inbook{10c8b937d8db4197b8a8c9b19085bdf7,
title = "Biobanking Across Europe Post-GDPR: A Deliberately Fragmented Landscape",
abstract = "This chapter seeks to provide insight into the ways in which Member States leveraged the regulatory discretion afforded to them by the GDPR. Specifically, it reviews the biobank regulatory environment; whether and how derogations under Article 89(2) GDPR are enabled; the legal basis for scientific research and the role of consent in biobanking post-GDPR; the balance between individual rights and public interest in national law; and finally, the GDPR{\textquoteright}s impact and future possibilities for biobanking. In exercising self-determination, Member States can, to a certain extent, align data protection requirements with their values and aspirations. Such alignment, though, could jeopardize collaborative research. In light of the need to bridge divergent legal and ethical requirements at a national and supranational level, the role of Research Ethics Committees (RECs) might prove to be essential.",
keywords = "Faculty of Law, GDPR, Biobanking",
author = "Olga Tzortzatou and Santa Slokenberga and Jane Reichel and {da Costa Andrade}, Andreia and Carla Barbosa and Sofie Bekaert and {van Veen}, Evert-Ben and Romeo-Casabona, {Carlos M.} and {{\'O} Cathaoir}, Katharina and Gauthier Chassang and Annelies Debucquoy and Jean-Jacques Der{\`e}ze and Laurent Doll{\'e} and {Eaker F{\"a}lt}, Sonja and Radek Halouzka and Mette Hartlev and Michael Hisbergues and Nils Hoppe",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.1007/978-3-030-49388-2_22",
language = "English",
isbn = "9783030493875",
series = "Law, Governance and Technology Series",
publisher = "Springer",
pages = "397--419",
editor = "Tzortzatou, {Olga } and Slokenberga, {Santa } and Reichel, {Jane }",
booktitle = "GDPR and Biobanking",
address = "Switzerland",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Biobanking Across Europe Post-GDPR

T2 - A Deliberately Fragmented Landscape

AU - Tzortzatou, Olga

AU - Slokenberga, Santa

AU - Reichel, Jane

AU - da Costa Andrade, Andreia

AU - Barbosa, Carla

AU - Bekaert, Sofie

AU - van Veen, Evert-Ben

AU - Romeo-Casabona, Carlos M.

AU - Ó Cathaoir, Katharina

AU - Chassang, Gauthier

AU - Debucquoy, Annelies

AU - Derèze, Jean-Jacques

AU - Dollé, Laurent

AU - Eaker Fält, Sonja

AU - Halouzka, Radek

AU - Hartlev, Mette

AU - Hisbergues, Michael

AU - Hoppe, Nils

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - This chapter seeks to provide insight into the ways in which Member States leveraged the regulatory discretion afforded to them by the GDPR. Specifically, it reviews the biobank regulatory environment; whether and how derogations under Article 89(2) GDPR are enabled; the legal basis for scientific research and the role of consent in biobanking post-GDPR; the balance between individual rights and public interest in national law; and finally, the GDPR’s impact and future possibilities for biobanking. In exercising self-determination, Member States can, to a certain extent, align data protection requirements with their values and aspirations. Such alignment, though, could jeopardize collaborative research. In light of the need to bridge divergent legal and ethical requirements at a national and supranational level, the role of Research Ethics Committees (RECs) might prove to be essential.

AB - This chapter seeks to provide insight into the ways in which Member States leveraged the regulatory discretion afforded to them by the GDPR. Specifically, it reviews the biobank regulatory environment; whether and how derogations under Article 89(2) GDPR are enabled; the legal basis for scientific research and the role of consent in biobanking post-GDPR; the balance between individual rights and public interest in national law; and finally, the GDPR’s impact and future possibilities for biobanking. In exercising self-determination, Member States can, to a certain extent, align data protection requirements with their values and aspirations. Such alignment, though, could jeopardize collaborative research. In light of the need to bridge divergent legal and ethical requirements at a national and supranational level, the role of Research Ethics Committees (RECs) might prove to be essential.

KW - Faculty of Law

KW - GDPR

KW - Biobanking

UR - https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-030-49388-2_22

U2 - 10.1007/978-3-030-49388-2_22

DO - 10.1007/978-3-030-49388-2_22

M3 - Book chapter

SN - 9783030493875

T3 - Law, Governance and Technology Series

SP - 397

EP - 419

BT - GDPR and Biobanking

A2 - Tzortzatou, Olga

A2 - Slokenberga, Santa

A2 - Reichel, Jane

PB - Springer

ER -

ID: 254779769