Statement of the Center for Democracy & Technology On
Foreign Surveillance and Human Rights, Part 2 Foreign Surveillance and Human Rights, Part 2: Interpreting the ICCPR Written by Marko Milanovic. This post is part of a series: Intro, Part 1, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5. Comparing the ICCPR and the ECHR. Chinese Surveillance Company Hikvision Hides Human Rights Apr 29, 2020
Employee Video Surveillance: Position of the European
Covid-19: digital surveillance, borders and human rights The Covid-19 crisis has put some of the fundamental principles of the EU to the test. During a Facebook Live, Maria Arena, chair of Parliament's human rights subcommittee, talked about the human rights aspects of the EU response to the pandemic. The EU has played an important role in enabling the free movement of goods and services, including medicines and equipment, to countries that needed Police Surveillance & Human Rights | Rahman Ravelli Mar 28, 2017
Data gathering and surveillance are portrayed as having an impact only on this individual right to privacy, rather than on a broad spectrum of rights, including freedom of expression, of assembly and association, the prohibition of discrimination and more.
Sep 13, 2017 · The Government’s human rights record remained poor. … Security forces committed a number of unlawful killings, including alleged political killings, and beat, tortured, and mistreated If this article has felt like a roll-call of human rights violations – that’s because it is. Mass surveillance through facial recognition technology threatens not just the right to privacy, but also democracy, freedom, and the opportunity to develop one’s self with dignity, autonomy and equality in society. Sep 13, 2018 · Government mass surveillance breached human rights, says European court. Bulk data collection revealed by Edward Snowden has been been found to violate privacy rights of UK citizens. Jul 20, 2020 · UN Report Urges Ban Of Surveillance Technology Immediately to Avoid Rights Abuses July 20, 2020 Tanya Elahi A report has been presented to the Human Rights Council by the UN Special Rapporteur on freedom of opinion and expression, stating that surveillance technology must be banned until effective controls can be put in place to regulate its use