| Item type | Current library | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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National Law School | Not for loan | LLM776 |
TABLE OF CONTENTS
TABLE OF CASES ;
1 CHAPTER 1 ;
INTRODUCTION ;
1.1 Introduction ;
1.2 Aims and objective ;
1.3 Research Question ;
1.4 outline of Chapters ;
1.5 Methodology ;
1.6 Scope and Limitations ;
1.7 Literature review ;
2 CHAPTER 2 ;
THE CONCEPT AND THEORIES OF JURISDICTION ;
2.1 Meaning and Definition of Jurisdiction ;
2.2 Types of Jurisdiction ;
2.3 objective of theories of jurisdiction ;
2.4 Theories of jurisdiction under international law ;
2.4.1 Territorial jurisdiction:- ;
2.4.2 Extraterritorial principle ;
2.5 Selling jurisdictional framework ;
2.5.1 Heeding other StatesĀ· concerns ;
3 CHAPTER 3 ;
JURISDICTION UNDER CYBERSPACE: ISSUES AND APPROACHES ;
3.1 Meaning and concept ;
3.2 Present law of jurisdiction: Adequate or need of separate law ;
3.3 Jurisdictional reasonableness in cyberspace ;
3.4 Types of Jurisdictional approaches for regulation ;
3.4.1 Spider Web approach ;
3.4.2 Highway approach ;
3.4.3 Cyberspace approach ;
3.5 Approaches taken by countries around the world for determining cyber jurisdiction;
3.5.1 Civil and IPR disputes ;
3.5.2 Criminal and long arm statues (extra-territorial jurisdiction) ;
4 CHAPTER 4 ;
DATA PROTECTION LAWS: LONG ARM PROVISIONS ;
4.1 The Concept of Data ;
4.2 Privacy of Data ;
4.3 What is Data Protection? ;
4.4 Why is Data Protection Needed? ;
4.5 Data Extraterritoriality ;
4.6 Approaches for extra-territorial expansion ;
4.6.1 Minimum Contacts and Substantial Connections ;
4.6.2 Power and Control of Data ;
4.6.3 But Location Still Matters for Conflict of Laws ;
4.6.4 Choice of Law ;
5 CHAPTER 5 ;
GDPR AND EU DATA PROTECTION LAWS: JURISDICTION AND
ENFORCEMENT ;
5.1 Basic regime ;
5.2 The extraterritorial aspirations of the GDPR: from a territorial to a destination approach ;
5.2.1 The incorporation of previous solutions: the extraterritorial application of the directive;
5.2.2 The new and broader extraterritorial claims of the GDPR ;
5.3 The legitimacy and legal basis for an extraterritorial application of the GDPR;
5.3.1 The identification of the international rules governing extraterritorial claims ;
5.3.2 The limited support of international custom ;
5.3.3 Legal basis in regard of the General Principles of Law Recognized by Civilized Nations;
5.4 Bark jurisdiction or bite jurisdiction: the enforcement issues ;
5.4.1 The broad investigative and corrective measures in the hands of supervisory authorities ;
5.4.2 Tile possible direct means of enforcement of tile GDPR against non-EU operators ;
5.4.3 Indirect means of enforcement of the GDPR against non-EU operators;
5.5 Analysis ;
6 CHAPTER 6 ;
DATA LOCALIZATION: FRAMEWORD AND LEGITIMACY ;
(INDIAN CONTEXT) ;
6.1 Data Localization framework ;
6.1.1 Data Localisation under the Data Protection Committee's Report and the Bill;
6.1.2 Mandatory Data Localisation being prescribed under different aspects;
6.2 Cost-Benefit Analysis on Data Localisation ;
6.2.1 Measuring the economic impact ;
6.3 Forced Localization of Cloud Services: Is Privacy the Real Driver? ;
6.4 Legitimacy under Privacy ;
7 CHAPTER 7 ;
CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS ;
7.1 Recommendation: Control over data, A Key to the future ;
7.2 Clarification needed: Entities not actively targeting people in India ;
BIBLIOGRAPHY.
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