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Winchester Conference on Trust, Risk, Information and the Law
#TRILCon - University of Winchester, Tuesday 29 April 2014
Accredited under the Solicitors Regulation Authority CPD scheme: Code FKF/DLUW
Programme
09150945
0945-1000
Registration &
Refreshments
1000-1045
Welcome
(all)
Plenary Address
(all)
Professor
Elizabeth
Stuart
Deputy
ViceChancellor,
University
of
Winchester
Matthew Reed
Chief Executive of
the Children’s
Society
“The role of trust
and information in
assessing risk and
protecting the
vulnerable”
1100-1230
First Breakout Strands
Information &
protecting the
vulnerable
Trust & transparency –
family courts, charities
& whistle-blowing
12301330-1415
1330
Lunch Plenary Address
(all)
Professor Norman
Fenton
Queen Mary
University of
London
“Improving
probability and
risk assessment in
the law”
1430-1600
Second Breakout Strands
Anonymity, the benefits
of reporting data
breaches & balancing
efficiency and efficacy
Alternative approaches –
regulation of risk,
information as property
and information sharing
Misuse of information
& miscarriages of
justice
Disclosure of national
statistics, forensic
information & DNA –
trust, control &
anonymity
Surveillance,
encryption, State
secrets & fashion!
Data linking, statistical
disclosure control,
Facebook privacy
policies & the right to be
forgotten
16001615
Break
1615-1715
Plenary Panel Session
(all)
[De]-anonymisation
& technology panel
Iain Bourne
(Group Manager,
Policy Delivery,
Information
Commissioner’s
Office)
Dr Mark Elliot
(Manchester
University),
Dr Kieron O’Hara
(Southampton
University),
Sue Gold, (Partner,
Data Privacy & Digital
Business, Osborne
Clarke)
17151730
Final
Remarks
11:00-12:30
Information & protecting the vulnerable
‘What do leaks and open government reveal about State Crimes?’ Matt Clement, University of Winchester
‘Child Protection MASH-up: the case of AB v Haringey, and whether seeking consent increases risk or increases trust’ Allan Norman, Celtic Knot
‘The End of the Volunteer Coach? Child Protection and Sports Coaching’ Merijn van Willigen, University of Winchester
Trust & transparency – family courts, charities and whistle-blowing
‘Family court closures and cuts alongside the new online services’ Sarah Meads, University of Winchester
‘Exploring Construct of Public Trust in Charities: An Empirical Study Based on Scale Development’ Yongjiao Yang, University of Hull
‘Whistle while you work: effective data sharing and protection of the vulnerable’ Helen James, University of Winchester
Misuse of information & miscarriages of justice
‘The Prosecutor’s Fallacy: how many innocent people have been convicted, and how can miscarriages of justice be identified after the event?’ Vincent Scheurer, Sarassin LLP
‘Assessing Criminal Law Response to the Misuse of Information’ Audrey Guinchard, University of Essex
‘Privacy by Design – a real solution or a daydream?’ Katarzyna Witkowska, University of Lodz
Surveillance, encryption, State secrets & fashion!
‘Secrets of State and the Rights of Access in Spain after the approval of the Law on Transparency’ Pilar Cousido González, Universidad Complutense de Madrid
‘Binding the leviathan: encryption, surveillance and the digital state of nature’ Lawrence Serewicz
‘Electronic surveillance, fashion, marketing & the law’ Savithri Bartlett, University of Winchester, Matteo Montecchi, University of the Arts London, London College of
Fashion and Marion Oswald, University of Winchester
14:30 – 16:00
Anonymity, the benefits of reporting data breaches & balancing efficiency and efficacy
'Privacy, the impact of anonymisation & the ICO's Code' Iain Bourne, Information Commissioner’s Office
‘Do the Benefits of Voluntarily Reporting Serious Data Breaches to the ICO Outweigh the Risk of Monetary Penalties?: A Theoretical Analysis’ Jack Manhire, Visiting Faculty
member & Executive Program Officer, Treasury Executive Institute, United States Department of the Treasury
‘Towards a Risk-Based Approach to Data Protection: Economic Efficiency at the Expense of Fundamental Rights Efficacy?’ Orla Lynskey, London School of Economics
Alternative approaches – regulation of risk, information as property and information sharing
‘Contemporary evolutions of EU Personal Data protection: the risk management of nothing?’ Raphaël Gellert, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
‘Through a Glass Darkly: Revisiting Information as Property in Boardman v Phipps [1967]’ Louisa Dubery, University of Winchester
‘NEISAS – a pilot system for secure information sharing in critical infrastructures’ David Sutton, tacit.tel limited
Disclosure of national statistics, forensic information & DNA – trust, control & anonymity
‘The push for open data: should EUL be replaced with OGL?’ Caroline Tudor, Office for National Statistics and Mark Elliot, University of Manchester
‘Trust and the International Exchange of Forensic Information’ Carole McCartney, Northumbria University
‘The governance of genetic information: a view from the trenches’ Maru Mormina, University of Winchester
Data linking, statistical disclosure control, Facebook privacy policies & the right to be forgotten
‘Should the Law Prescribe Statistical Disclosure Control? Emmanuel Lazaridis, University College London
‘The people v Facebook: the transparency of privacy policies’ Estrella Gutiérrez, University Carlos III of Madrid
‘The right to be forgotten in the age of Big Data’ Monika Zwolinska, University of Nice - Sophia Antipolis
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