Charles D. Raab
Brief Curriculum Vitae
Charles Raab (born 23 December 1939 in New York, USA) holds degrees in Government and
Political Science from Columbia and Yale Universities, and has dual nationality (UK and USA). He
joined the then Department of Politics at the University of Edinburgh in 1964, and later became
Professor of Government. Having retired at the end of 2007, he is Professor Emeritus and
Honorary Professorial Fellow in the School of Social and Political Science at Edinburgh, where he
is also associated with the Institute for the Study of Science, Technology and Innovation (ISSTI).
He has held visiting positions at several other universities and institutes in The Netherlands,
Canada, Germany, New Zealand, and the UK (Oxford Internet Institute), and has served on
advisory or editorial boards of research projects, national research funding bodies, academic
journals and conferences, as well as governmental expert groups. He is the author of many
academic articles, book chapters, and books, including (with Colin Bennett), The Governance of
Privacy (2006). With grants from the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) and other
bodies, he has conducted funded research on information policy and regulatory issues, including
privacy, data protection, surveillance, police co-operation, identity management, data-sharing,
and e-government. One of these, carried out from 2003 to 2005 with Christine Bellamy and Perri
6, was an ESRC-funded project, ‘Joined-up Public Services: Data-sharing and Privacy in MultiAgency Working’.
Charles Raab is on the Management Committee of the EU/European Science Foundation’s COST
Action ISO807 on ‘Living in Surveillance Societies’ (LiSS), and participates in several EU-funded
projects under the 7th Framework Programme. These are PRISMS (The Privacy and Security
Mirrors: Towards a European Framework for Integrated Decision Making), which examines the
relationship between human privacy and security; IRISS (Increasing Resilience in Surveillance
Societies), which concerns surveillance and the challenges for democracy and an open society;
and SIAM (Security Impact Assessment Measure), which develops a decision support system for
security technologies used in transport infrastructures, in the light of privacy and other values.
Within the 6th Framework Programme, he worked on PRIME (Privacy and Identity Management
for Europe). He also is associated with a Major Collaborative Research Initiative, ‘The New
Transparency: Surveillance and Social Sorting’, funded by the Canadian Social Sciences and
Humanities Research Council (SSHRC). Alongside representatives of the Scottish Government,
the UK Information Commissioner’s Office and local authorities, he founded the Scottish Privacy
Forum and serves on its Steering Committee. He expects soon to become a Director (with Dr.
William Webster of the University of Stirling and Dr. Kirstie Ball of the Open University) of the
newly-created Centre for Research into Information, Surveillance and Privacy (CRISP).
In addition to his academic research, Charles Raab has had considerable experience with
commissioned research carried out for public and other agencies. He has written reports for the
European Commission, UK and Scottish government agencies, and has advised various civil
society and research organisations (including the New Zealand Law Commission) on their privacy
and surveillance projects and publications. With Perri 6, Anne Birch and Marina Copping, he coauthored Information Sharing for Children at Risk: Impacts on Privacy (2004), which examined
the feasibility of conducting a Privacy Impact Assessment for the Scottish Executive Health
Department eCare Programme. With the Surveillance Studies Network, he co-authored the
Report on the Surveillance Society (2006) and an Update Report (2010) on this subject for the UK
Information Commissioner’s Office. With Benjamin Goold, he co-authored Protecting
Information Privacy (2011) for the UK Equality and Human Rights Commission. He was the
Specialist Adviser to the House of Lords Select Committee on the Constitution for an Inquiry that
resulted in Surveillance: Citizens and the State, HL Paper 18, Second Report, Session 2008-09. He
was a member of the Experts Group in the Identity and Passport Service (Home Office), and of
the Experts Group that produced the Scottish Government’s Identity Management and Privacy
Principles (2010). He also sat on the Advisory Group in the Performance and Innovation Unit
(Cabinet Office) for their report, Privacy and Data-Sharing: The Way Forward for Public Services
(2002). He is an Academician of the Academy of Social Sciences (AcSS), and a Fellow of the Royal
Society of Arts (FRSA).
Charles D. Raab
Selected List of Publications, 1992-2012
[Note: This list omits publications prior to 1992, and publications in other fields not
relevant to the COST Short-Term Scientific Mission]
2012 (forthcoming)
Book/Special Issue
(with William Webster, Francisco Klauser and Eric Töpfer (eds.)), “Special Issue: Revisiting the
Surveillance Camera Revolution: Issues of Governance and Public Policy: Part Two”,
Information Polity, Vol. 17, No. 1 (with Introduction).
Contributions to Books
“The Meaning of „Accountability‟ in the Information Privacy Context”, in Daniel Guagnin, Leon
Hempel, Carla Ilten, Inga Kroener, Daniel Neyland and Hector Postigo (eds.), Managing Privacy
through Accountability, London: Palgrave Macmillan.
“Regulating Surveillance: The Importance of Principles”, pp. 409-417 in David Lyon, Kevin
Haggerty and Kirstie Ball (eds.), Routledge Handbook of Surveillance Studies, London:
Routledge.
(with Esther Keymolen and Corien Prins), “Trust and ICT: New Challenges for Public
Administration”, in Wim van de Donk and Marcel Thaens (eds.), The Coming of Age of ICT in
Public Administration, Amsterdam: IOS Press.
Journal Article
“Privacy, Social Values, and the Public Interest”, Politische Vierteljahresschrift Sonderheft 46,
Andreas Busch and Jeanette Hofmann (eds.) „Politik und die Regulierung von Information‟
[„Politics and the Regulation of Information‟]
2012
Contributions to Books
(with David Wright), “Surveillance: Extending the Limits of Privacy Impact Assessment”, pp.
363-383 in David Wright and Paul De Hert (eds.), Privacy Impact Assessment, Dordrecht:
Springer.
2011
Book/Special Issue
(with William Webster, Francisco Klauser and Eric Töpfer (eds.)), “Special Issue: Revisiting the
Surveillance Camera Revolution: Issues of Governance and Public Policy: Part One”,
Information Polity, Vol. 16, No. 4 (with Introduction).
Journal Article
“Networks for Regulation: Privacy Commissioners in a Changing World”, Journal of Comparative
Policy Analysis: Research and Practice, Vol. 13, No. 2, pp. 195-213.
Report
(with Benjamin Goold), Protecting Information Privacy, Research Report RR69, London:
Equality and Human Rights Commission.
2010
Journal Articles
“Information Privacy: Networks of Regulation at the Subglobal Level‟, Global Policy, Vol. 1,
No. 3, pp. 291-302.
(with Perri 6 and Christine Bellamy), “Information Sharing Dilemmas in Public Services: Using
Frameworks from Risk Management”, Policy & Politics, Vol. 38, No. 3, pp. 465-81.
Report
(with Kirstie Ball, Stephen Graham, David Lyon, David Murakami Wood, and Clive Norris), The
Surveillance Society – An Update Report on Developments Since the 2006 Report on the
Surveillance Society, Wilmslow: Office of the Information Commissioner. Reproduced in House
of Commons Home Affairs Committee, Information Commissioner’s Annual Report to the House
of Commons pursuant to the Home Affairs Committee’s report ‘A Surveillance Society’, Fifth
Report of Session 2007-08, Fourth Report of Session 2010-11, HC 702, published 1 March 2011,
London: The Stationery Office.
2009
Contributions to Books
(with Bert-Jaap Koops), “Privacy Actors, Performances and the Future of Privacy Protection”, pp.
207-221 in Serge Gutwirth, Yves Poullet, Paul De Hert, Cecile de Terwangne and Sjaak Nouwt
(eds.), Reinventing Data Protection?, Dordrecht: Springer.
“Identity: Difference and Categorization”, pp. 227-244 in Ian Kerr, Carole Lucock and Valerie
Steeves (eds.), Lessons From the Identity Trail: Privacy, Anonymity and Identity in a Networked
Society, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Contribution to writing of: KANTOR Management Consultants S.A., Evaluation of the Means
Used by National Data Protection Supervisory Authorities in the Promotion of Personal Data
Protection – Final Report, European Commission: Directorate-General Justice, Freedom and
Security. Contract JLS/2007/C4/040: 30-CE-0185875/00-79, available at:
http://ec.europa.eu/justice/policies/privacy/docs/studies/final_report_kantor_management_consulta
nts.pdf
Contribution to writing of: KANTOR Management Consultants S.A., Evaluation of the
contribution of Working Party 29 to the work of the Commission in the field of Data Protection –
Final Report, European Commission: Directorate-General Justice, Freedom and Security.
Contract JLS/2006/A1/004
Journal Article
(with Benjamin Goold), “Putting Surveillance on the Political Agenda: A Short Defence of
Surveillance: Citizens and the State”, Surveillance & Society, Vol. 6, No. 4, pp. 408-413.
Media and other Articles
„What Outcomes Should Regulation Achieve for Individuals, Regulators and Society?‟, Data
Protection Review, No. 10, October; available at http://dataprotectionreview.eu/ (published by the
Madrid Data Protection Agency)
(with Benjamin Goold), “Reflections on Surveillance: Citizens and the State”, Privacy Laws &
Business, UK Newsletter Issue 44, August, pp. 8-10.
2008
Contributions to Books
“Surveillance and Privacy: The Regulatory Options” (“Vigilância e Privacidade: as Opçoes de
Regulação”), pp. 255-292 in Catarina Frois (ed.), A Sociedade Vigilante. Ensaios sobre
Identificação, Vigilância e Privacidade, Lisbon: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. [in Portuguese]
(with Paul De Hert), “Tools for Technology Regulation: Seeking Analytical Approaches Beyond
Lessig and Hood”, pp. 263-285 in Roger Brownsword and Karen Yeung (eds.), Regulating
Technologies: Legal Futures, Regulatory Frames and Technological Fixes, Oxford: Hart
Publishing.
“Social and Political Dimensions of Identity”, pp. 3-19 in Simone Fischer-Huebner, Penny
Duquenoy, Albin Zuccato and Leonardo Martucci (eds.), The Future of Identity in the
Information Society: Proceedings of the IFIP WG 9.2, 9.6/11.6,11.7/FIDIS Summer School on
"The Future of Identity in the Information Society", Karlstad, 4-8 August 2007, Berlin: Springer
(with Perri 6 and Christine Bellamy), “A Place of Greater Safety? Information Sharing and
Confidentiality”, pp. 81-89 in Charlie Edwards and Catherine Fieschi (eds.), UK Confidential,
London: Demos.
Journal Articles
(with Perri 6, Christine Bellamy, Adam Warren and Catherine Heeney), “Information-Sharing
and Confidentiality in Social Policy: Regulating Multi-agency Working”, Public Administration,
Vol. 86 , No. 3, pp. 737-759.
Working Paper
“Beyond Activism: Research Perspectives on Privacy” (February 2008), Tilburg University Legal
Studies Working Paper No. 004/2008 (TILT Law & Technology Working Paper Series No.
007/2008). Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1096562
2007
Contribution to Book
“Privacy Protection and ICT: Issues, Instruments, and Concepts”, pp. 427-448 in Robin Mansell,
Chrisanthi Avgerou, Danny Quah and Roger Silverstone (eds.), Oxford Handbook on Information
and Communication Technologies, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Journal Articles
(with Perri 6, Christine Bellamy, Adam Warren and Catherine Heeney), “Institutional Shaping of
Inter-agency Working: Managing Tensions Between Collaborative Working and Client
Confidentiality”, Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory, Vol. 17, No. 3, pp. 405434.
“The EGPA Study Group at 20: Reflections Backwards, Forwards, and Sideways”. Information
Polity, Vol. 12, No. 4, pp. 1-8.
Working Paper
(with Paul De Hert), “The Regulation of Technology: Policy Tools and Policy Actors”
(November 2007), Tilburg University Legal Studies Working Paper No. 004/2007 (TILT Law &
Technology Working Paper Series No. 003/2007). Available at SSRN:
http://ssrn.com/abstract=1030263
2006
Book
(with Colin J. Bennett), The Governance of Privacy: Policy Instruments in Global Perspective,
revised 2nd (paperback) edition, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Report
(with David Murakami Wood, Kirstie Ball, David Lyon, Clive Norris and Stephen Graham), A
Report on the Surveillance Society, Wilmslow: Office of the Information Commissioner.
Contribution to Book
(with Christine Bellamy and Perri 6), “Multi-agency Working in British Social Policy: Risk,
Information Sharing and Privacy”, in Miriam Lips, John Taylor and Frank Bannister (eds.),
Public Administration in the Information Society: Essays on Risk and Trust, Amsterdam: IOS
Press.
Journal Articles
“The Study of Information Policy: Privacy Protection and Freedom of Information”, Journal of
Zhejiang Provincial Party School (in Chinese), Vol. 22, No. 1, January, pp. 5-13.
“Recent Developments in Policy Studies”, Journal of Public Management (Harbin) (in Chinese),
Vol. 3, No. 2, pp. 60-69. ISSN 1672-6162
(with Perri 6, Christine Bellamy and Adam Warren), “Partnership and Privacy – Tension or
Settlement? The Case of Adult Mental Health Services”, Social Policy and Society, Vol. 5, No. 2,
pp. 237-248.
2005
Contributions to Books
(with Perri 6 and Christine Bellamy), “Personal Data in the Public Sector: Reconciling Necessary
Sharing with Confidentiality?”, pp. 133-54 in Susanne Lace (ed.), The Glass Consumer: Living in
a Surveillance Society, Bristol: The Policy Press.
“Regulatory Provisions for Privacy Protection”, pp. 45-67 in Susanne Lace (ed.), The Glass
Consumer: Living in a Surveillance Society, Bristol: The Policy Press.
“The Future of Privacy Protection”, pp. 282-318 in Robin Mansell and Brian Collins (eds.), Trust
and Crime in Information Societies, Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.
“The Governance of Global Issues: Protecting Privacy in Personal Information”, in Mathias
Koenig-Archibugi and Michael Zürn (eds.), New Modes of Governance in the Global System:
Exploring Publicness, Delegation and Inclusiveness, London: Palgrave.
“Nagy-Britanniától Magyarországig”, pp. 219-23 in László Majtényi, Peter Molnár, Ádám Petri
Lukács and Máté Szabó (eds.) Az Elektronikus Információszabadság, Budapest: Eötvös Károly
Intézet. [in Hungarian]
Journal Articles
“Perspectives on „Personal Identity‟”, BT Technology Journal, Vol. 23, No. 4, October, pp. 1524.
(with David Mason), “Researching the Origins of UK Data Protection”, Information,
Communication and Society, Vol. 8, No. 2, June, pp. 235-7.
(with David Mason), “Surveillance and the Human-Machine Interface”, Information,
Communication and Society, Vol. 8, No. 1, March, pp. 81-3.
(with Perri 6 and Christine Bellamy), “Joined-up Government and Privacy in the United
Kingdom: Managing Tensions Between Data Protection and Social Policy, Part I”, Public
Administration, Vol. 83, No. 1, March, pp. 111-133.
(with Perri 6 and Christine Bellamy), “Joined-up Government and Privacy in the United
Kingdom: Managing Tensions Between Data Protection and Social Policy, Part II”, Public
Administration, Vol. 83, No. 2, June, pp. 393-415.
(with Christine Bellamy and Perri 6), “Multi-agency Working in British Social Policy: Risk,
Information Sharing and Privacy”, Information Polity, Vol. 10, Nos. 1-2, December, pp. 51-63.
(re-published in Lips et al. (eds.) (2006) above)
2004
Contributions to Books
“Privacy Issues as Limits to Access”, pp. 23-47 in Georg Aichholzer and Herbert Burkert (eds.),
Public Sector Information in the Digital Age: Between Markets, Public Management and
Citizens’ Rights, Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.
(with Christine Bellamy), “Electronic Democracy and the „Mixed Polity‟: Symbiosis or
Conflict?”, pp. 17-42 in Rachel Gibson, Andrea Römmele and Steven Ward (eds.), Electronic
Democracy: Mobilisation, Organisation and Participation via New ICTs, London: Routledge.
Journal Articles
(with David Mason), “CCTV: Identities, Accounts and Legal Rulings”, Information,
Communication and Society, Vol. 7, No. 2, June, pp. 249-51.
(with David Mason), “Online Privacy: Implications of a Canadian Case Study”, Information,
Communication and Society, Vol. 7, No. 1, March, pp. 89-91.
Report
(with Perri 6, Anne Birch and Marine Copping), Information Sharing for Children at Risk:
Impacts on Privacy, E-Care Programme, Scottish Executive Health Department, Edinburgh. 179
pp.
2003
Book
(with Colin J. Bennett), The Governance of Privacy: Policy Instruments in Global Perspective,
Aldershot: Ashgate.
Contributions to Books
(with Colin J. Bennett and Priscilla M. Regan), “People and Place: Patterns of Individual
Identification Within Intelligent Transportation Systems”, pp. 153-175 in David Lyon (ed.),
Surveillance as Social Sorting: Privacy, Risk, and Digital Discrimination, London: Routledge.
“Joined-up Surveillance: The Challenge to Privacy”, pp. 42-61 in Kirstie Ball and Frank Webster
(eds.), The Intensification of Surveillance: Crime, Terrorism and Warfare in the Information Age,
London: Pluto Press.
Journal Articles
(with David Mason), “Identifying People: Biometric Discourse”, Information, Communication
and Society, Vol. 6, No. 1, March, pp. 83-4.
(with David Mason), “The Interception of Communication: Two Studies”, Information,
Communication and Society, Vol. 6, No. 3, September, pp. 377-9.
2002
Contribution to Book
(with Colin J. Bennett and Priscilla M. Regan), “Onboard Telematics and the Surveillance of
Movement: The Case of Car Rental Systems”, pp. 53-66 in Isabel Alvarez, Terrel Ward Bynum,
José Álvaro Assis Lopes and Simon Rogerson (eds.), The Transformation of Organisations in the
Information Age: Social and Ethical Implications, Proceedings of the Sixth International
Conference of ETHICOMP, 13-15 November, Lisbon: Universidade Lusiada.
Journal Articles
“Surveillance: The Need for Research Evidence”, Information, Communication and Society, Vol.
5, No. 4, December, pp. 551-4.
(with David Mason), “Privacy, Surveillance, Trust and Regulation: Individual and Collective
Dilemmas of Online Privacy Protection”, Information, Communication and Society, Vol. 5, No.
3, September, pp. 379-81.
(with David Mason), “Privacy, Surveillance, Trust and Regulation: A Series”, Information,
Communication and Society, Vol. 5, No. 2, March, pp. 237-241.
2001
Contributions to Books
"Information Rights in Hungary: Observations on Experience", pp. 195-216 in László Majtényi
(ed.), The Door Onto the Other Side: A Report on Information Rights, Budapest: Office of the
Parliamentary Commissioner for Data Protection and Freedom of Information.
"Electronic Service Delivery in the UK: Proaction and Privacy Protection", pp. 41-62 in J.E.J.
Prins (ed.), Designing E-Government: On the Crossroads of Technological Innovation and
Institutional Change, Boston & The Hague, Kluwer Law International.
"Privacy Protection: Revisiting Four Concepts", pp. 115-126 in Centre de Recherches
Informatique et Droit (ed.), Variations sur le Droit de la Société de l’Information, Brussels:
Bruylant.
Journal Articles
(with John J. Borking), “Laws, PETs and Other Technologies for Privacy Protection”, The
Journal of Information, Law and Technology (JILT), 1, February; refereed article in on-line
journal, available at http://elj.warwick.ac.uk/jilt/01-1/borking.html/
1999
Contributions to Books
"Governing Privacy: Systems, Participants and Policy Instruments", in Proceedings of Ethicomp99:
Fifth International Conference, Rome.
(with Christine Bellamy), “Wiring-up the Deck-Chairs?”, pp. 156-172 in Stephen Coleman, John
Taylor and Wim van de Donk (eds.), Parliament in the Age of the Internet, Oxford: Oxford
University Press.
"National Privacy Laws: United Kingdom", Sec. 16.07, pp. 83-96 in Corien Prins and Ernst-Jan
Louwers (eds.), International Computer Law, Publication 318, Release 14, : Matthew Bender.
(with Gary Williams), "Privacy in the GII: Issues, Processes and Solutions", pp. 21-41 in Simone
Fischer-Hübner, Gerald Quirchmayr and Louise Yngström (eds.),User Identification and Privacy
Protection: Applications in Public Administration and Electronic Commerce, Proceedings of the
Joint IFIP WG 8,5 and WG 9.6 Working Conference, 14-15 June, Kista, Sweden: Stockholm
University/Royal Institute of Technology.
(with Colin J. Bennett, Robert M. Gellman and Nigel Waters), "Judging Privacy: How Adequate
is Data Protection in Electronic Commerce?", pp. 29-34 in Computers, Freedom and Privacy
1999 Conference Papers, Washington, DC: The Association for Computing Machinery.
"From Balancing to Steering: New Directions for Data Protection", ch. 3 (pp. 68-93) in Colin
Bennett and Rebecca Grant (eds.), Visions of Privacy: Policy Approaches for the Digital Age,
Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
"Identity Checks - and Balances", pp. 87-95 in Eberhard Bort and Russell Keat (eds.), The
Boundaries of Understanding: Essays in Honour of Malcolm Anderson, Edinburgh: International
Social Sciences Institute.
"Protecting Privacy", pp. 199-201 in William Dutton (ed.), Society on the Line: Information
Politics in the Digital Age, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Journal Articles
"La transposition de la directive européenne sur la protection des données personnelles au
Royaume-Uni" (“The Transposition of the European Union Data Protection Directive in the
United Kingdom”), Revue française d'administration publique, numéro 89, janvier-mars, pp. 2136.
(with Christine Bellamy), "Wiring-up the Deck-Chairs?" Parliamentary Affairs, Vol. 52, No. 3,
July, pp. 518-534 (re-published in book; see 1999).
"How Adequate is Privacy Protection Outside the EU?", Information Technology and Public
Policy, Supplement on Electronic Commerce and Public Policy, Spring, pp. 23-24.
Report
(with Colin J. Bennett, Robert M. Gellman and Nigel Waters), Application of a Methodology
Designed to Assess the Adequacy of the Level of Protection of Individuals With Regard to Processing
Personal Data: Test of the Method on Several Categories of Transfer, Luxembourg: Office for
Official Publications of the European Communities.
1998
Contributions to Books
"Electronic Confidence: Trust, Information and Public Administration", ch. 8 (pp. 113-133) in
Ignace Snellen and Wim van de Donk (eds.), Public Administration in an Information Age: A
Handbook, Amsterdam: IOS Press.
"Privacy and Trust: Information, Government and ICT", pp. 565-577 in Proceedings of
Ethicomp98: Fourth International Conference on Ethical Issues of Information Technology,
Rotterdam: Erasmus University.
Journal Articles and Other Published Papers
(with Colin J. Bennett), "The Distribution of Privacy Risks: Who Needs Protection?", The
Information Society, Vol. 14, No. 4, October-December, pp. 263-274.
“Trust, Technology and Privacy”, Ends and Means, Vol. 3, No.1, Autumn, pp. 3-10.
"Sectoral Approches to Data Protection", Privacy & Informatie, Vol. 1, No. 2, June, pp. 60-64.
(with David L. Lyle), "Data Protection and the Police: Implementing the Code of Practice in
Scotland", New Waverley Papers, Politics Series, 98-1.
1997
Contributions to Books
"Data Protection", pp. 627-630 in Jay Shafritz (ed.), International Encyclopedia of Public Policy
and Administration, Volume 2, Boulder, CO: Westview Press.
"Privacy, Democracy, Information", ch. 10 (pp. 155-174) in Brian Loader (ed.), The Governance
of Cyberspace, London: Routledge.
Journal Articles
(with Colin J. Bennett), "The Adequacy of Privacy: The European Union Data Protection
Directive and the North American Response", The Information Society, Vol. 13, No. 3, JulySeptember, pp. 245-263.
"Co-Producing Data Protection", International Review of Law Computers & Technology, Vol. 11,
No. 1, March, pp. 11-24.
1996
Book/ Special Issue
(with Wim van de Donk and Colin J. Bennett) (eds.), Symposium, "The Politics and Policy of
Data Protection", International Review of Administrative Sciences, Vol. 62, No. 4 (includes
editors' Introduction and Conclusion)
Contributions to Books
(with Colin J. Bennett), "Distributing Privacy: Risks, Protection and Policy", pp. 336-350 in
Porfirio Barroso, Terrel Ward Bynum, Simon Rogerson and Luis Joyanes (eds.) Ethicomp96 - III
International Conference, Values and Social Responsibilties of Computer Science, Proceedings,
Volume 1, Madrid: Universidad Complutense de Madrid.
(with Christine Bellamy, John Taylor, William Dutton and Malcolm Peltu), "The Information
Polity: Electronic Democracy, Privacy, and Surveillance", ch. 16 (pp. 283-299) in William
Dutton (ed.), Information and Communication Technologies: Visions and Realities, Oxford:
Oxford University Press.
(with William Dutton, John Taylor, Christine Bellamy and Malcolm Peltu), "Innovation in Public
Service Delivery", ch. 15 (pp. 265-282) in William Dutton (ed.), Information and Communication
Technologies: Visions and Realities, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Journal Articles
(with Colin J. Bennett), "Taking the Measure of Privacy: Can Data Protection Be Evaluated?",
International Review of Administrative Sciences, Vol. 62, No. 4, December, pp. 535-556.
"Implementing Data Protection in Britain", International Review of Administrative Sciences, Vol.
62, No. 4, December, pp. 493-511.
(with Wim van de Donk and Colin J. Bennett), "The Politics and Policy of Data Protection:
Experiences, Lessons, Reflections and Perspectives", International Review of Administrative
Sciences, Vol. 62, No. 4, December, pp. 459-464.
(with Colin J. Bennett and Wim van de Donk), "The Politics and Policy of Data Protection:
Concluding Observations", International Review of Administrative Sciences, Vol. 62, No. 4,
December, pp. 569-574.
"Is Gegevensbechirming een Kwestie van Evenwichtskunst?" ("Data Protection: A Balancing
Act?"), Zeno, Vol. 4, No. 5, October, pp. 24-27.
1995
Book
(with Malcolm Anderson, Monica den Boer, Peter Cullen, William Gilmore and Neil Walker),
Policing the European Union, Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Contributions to Books
"European Perspectives on Protection of Privacy", pp. 257-265 in Harlan Onsrud (ed.)
Proceedings of the Conference on Law and Information Policy for Spatial Databases, Orono,
Maine, USA: National Center for Geographic Information and Analysis.
"Equality and Privacy: Who Gets What Data Protection?", pp. 111-122 in Peter Ippel, Guus de
Heij & Bart Crouwers (eds.), Privacy Disputed, Den Haag: SDU.
"Connecting Orwell to Athens? Information Superhighways and the Privacy Debate", ch. 13 (pp.
195-211) in Wim van de Donk, Ignace Snellen & Peter Tops (eds.), Orwell in Athens: A
Perspective on Informatization and Democracy, Amsterdam: IOS Press.
1994
Contribution to Books
"Police Cooperation: The Prospects for Privacy", ch. 7 (pp. 121-136) in Malcolm Anderson &
Monica den Boer (eds.), Policing Across National Boundaries, London: Pinter.
Journal Articles and Other Published Papers
(with William Dutton, John Taylor, Christine Bellamy and Malcolm Peltu), "Electronic Service
Delivery: Themes and Issues in the Public Sector", Policy Research Paper No. 28, Brunel
University, Uxbridge: Programme on Information and Communication Technologies, Economic
and Social Research Council.
"Open Government: Policy Information and Information Policy", The Political Quarterly, Vol.
65, No. 3, July-September, pp. 340-347.
(with Colin J. Bennett), "Protecting Privacy Across Borders: European Policies and Prospects",
Public Administration, Vol. 72, No. 1, Spring, pp. 95-112.
1993
Contributions to Books
"Education and the Impact of the New Right", ch. 12 (pp. 230-250) in A. Grant Jordan and Nigel
Ashford (eds.), Public Policy and the Impact of the New Right, London: Pinter.
"IT and the Protection of Personal Privacy", pp. 5-12 of part II in Juri Gornostaev and Ray
Thomas (eds.), Proceedings of the International Conference on Information Technology and
People - ITAP '93, Moscow: International Centre for Scientific and Technical Information.
"Parents and Schools: What Role for Education Authorities?", ch. 10 (pp. 148-168) in Pamela
Munn (ed.), Parents and Schools: Customers, Managers or Partners?, London & New York:
Routledge.
"The Governance of Data Protection", ch. 8 (pp. 89-103) in Jan Kooiman (ed.), Modern
Governance, London & Beverly Hills: Sage.
Journal Article
"Data Protection in Britain: Governance and Learning", Governance, Vol. 6, No. 1, January, pp.
43-66.
1992
Journal Article
"Information and Communication Technology, Government Transparency and Data Protection",
Informatization and the Public Sector, Vol. 2, No. 1, July, pp. 75-91.
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