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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
21

Comparative data protection and security : a critical evealuation of legal standards

London, R. W. 09 1900 (has links)
This study1 addresses the key information technology issues of the age and its unintended consequences. The issues include social control by businesses, governments, and information age Star Chambers. The study focuses on a comparative analysis of data protection, data security, and information privacy (DPSIP) laws, regulations, and practices in five countries. The countries include Australia, Canada, South Africa, the United Kingdom, and the United States. The study addresses relevant international legal standards and justifications. This multidisciplinary analysis includes a systems thinking approach from a legal, business, governmental, policy, political theory, psychosocial, and psychological perspective. The study implements a comparative law and sociolegal research strategy. Historic, linguistic, and statistical strategies are applied. The study concludes with a next step proposal, based on the research, for the international community, the five countries in the study, and specifically, South Africa as it has yet to enact a sound DPSIP approach. / LL.D. (Laws)
22

Comparative data protection and security : a critical evaluation of legal standards

London, Ray William 09 1900 (has links)
This study1 addresses the key information technology issues of the age and its unintended consequences. The issues include social control by businesses, governments, and information age Star Chambers. The study focuses on a comparative analysis of data protection, data security, and information privacy (DPSIP) laws, regulations, and practices in five countries. The countries include Australia, Canada, South Africa, the United Kingdom, and the United States. The study addresses relevant international legal standards and justifications. This multidisciplinary analysis includes a systems thinking approach from a legal, business, governmental, policy, political theory, psychosocial, and psychological perspective. The study implements a comparative law and sociolegal research strategy. Historic, linguistic, and statistical strategies are applied. The study concludes with a next step proposal, based on the research, for the international community, the five countries in the study, and specifically, South Africa as it has yet to enact a sound DPSIP approach. / LL. D.
23

The inadequacy of consumer protection in the UAE : the need for reform

AlGhafri, Abdulla M. A. January 2013 (has links)
This thesis addresses the consumer protection regime in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) against damages posed by defective industrial products, unfair business practices and misleading advertising. Nowadays, unfair and deceptive practices such as the selling of defective or sub-standard goods, the charging of exorbitant prices, misrepresentation of the efficacy or usefulness of goods, and negligence as to safety standards have become rampant. Accordingly, it has become necessary to promote the development and refinement of statutory measures, even in developed countries, to make producers/traders more accountable to consumers. This thesis examines the legal grounds on which consumer protection stands within the newly enacted legal framework for consumer protection in the UAE. In addition, this thesis elaborates upon relevant regulations provided by UAE legislators as well as related laws in selected Arab countries. It further investigates the adequacy of administrative authorities’ measures in the UAE, and explains whether respective administrative rules are capable of compensating consumers for material and physical damages incurred. It also explores the inadequacies of the administration’s measures and rules, and highlights the importance of integration between administrative bodies in achieving a sufficient level of protection for consumers. The findings of this thesis are based on a detailed review of specific issues in consumer protection models in the Shari’a law and the United Kingdom (UK) model. Thus, it will refer to solutions devised by Islamic Shari’a law and the UK legal system to provide more comprehensive protection to consumers and strengthen their position in relation to that of traders. The study suggests that there is a need to amend the consumer protection in the UAE. It indicates a need for the unified, effective and meaningful implementation of consumer protection legal and administrative procedures in the UAE, and emphasizes that the non-governmental consumer protection association must be given a wider and legal role in supporting the governmental bodies. These findings may help in improving the current consumer protection regime in the UAE as well as reducing infringements committed by traders. This thesis concludes by making recommendations for drafting a comprehensive set of rules in the UAE in the hopes that such recommendations will contribute effectively toward the development of a consumer protection regime in the UAE.
24

Computer Crime as a Barrier to Electronic Commerce: New Solutions for Public Law Enforcement.

Temur, Nuri 08 1900 (has links)
Electronic commerce was expected to grow exponentially, but the actual rate of growth in recent years has been disappointing. Recent surveys of perceptions of the development of electronic commerce clearly focus our attention on the perception and fear of computer crime as the major cause of this disappointing growth pattern. The thesis critiques existing private law solutions to this problem and argues from a normative theory on “the commons” for the application of new public law enforcement solutions in the public trust, sanctions, and public coproduction of order. The thesis argues that given the failures of existing private law solutions to the problem, these public law enforcement solutions should be more effective, efficient, and more satisfactory.
25

Profilování a právní úprava ochrany soukromí / Profiling and Legal Regulation of Privacy Protection

Marečková, Dana January 2016 (has links)
The purpose of this thesis is to elucidate what online profiling is, what happens with users' or customers' personal data during this process, how these activities interfere with the individuals' right to privacy, what the legal regulation in this field is, whether the privacy interests of individuals are sufficiently protected and if not, how the situation might be improved. The thesis starts with description of todays' business practices that are based on collecting data about customers, analyzing it and creating profiles suggesting the most profitable behaviour of businesses towards customers. It is followed by explanation of the technological tools enabling data collection and the method of data mining that is the key enabler of creating profiles. The text continues with description of risks of profiling in relation to privacy, i.e. the issues of discrimination, de-individualisation, restriction of individual autonomy, information asymmetries and possible misuse of profiles. The notion of right to privacy is explained and other interests that have to be balanced with privacy are mentioned as well. After that follows a critical description of the current legal framework in the European Union. It consists of Data Protection Directive, ePrivacy Directive and since 2018 of the General Data...
26

Ochrana spotřebitele v ČR a zahraničí / Consumer protection law in Czech republic and abroad

Holoubková, Jana January 2011 (has links)
The main purpose of this thesis is concise description of consumer protection law in Czech republic and its comparison with the legislation in United States of America in selected legal question - warranty. In the first part of the thesis there are defined the general issues related to the consumer protection law and briefly described the development of consumer protection law not only in Czech republic, but also abroad and one part of the thesis is also dedicated to the sources of current czech consumer protection law. Next part is dealing with the impacts of new amendments to the law of consumer protection law. In the last, comparative part, we are comparing selected legal issue of warranty in czech and United States of America legal system.
27

O regime da propriedade intelectual para a cana-de-açúcar / The regulation of intelectual property for sugarcane

Francisco, Alison Cleber 20 October 2014 (has links)
A cana-de-açúcar é a cultura mais importante na formação do Brasil que conhecemos: presente desde o surgimento da Colônia Portuguesa até os dias atuais, foi protagonista da agroindústria brasileira em diversos momentos da história. Nesse ínterim papel fundamental tem a cana-de-açúcar, que é o vegetal de onde se originam os subprodutos da cana o açúcar, o etanol e, mais recentemente, a energia elétrica de biomassa. Como tantas outras culturas, a cana-de-açúcar teve uma diversificação de espécies com o fim de combater pragas, doenças, adaptação a diversos climas e solos, tempo de produção, aumento de sua eficiência, adequação às novas técnicas de cultivo, e muitas dessas alterações (a maçante maioria, sejamos sinceros) são fruto de pesquisas que fizeram surgir diversas espécies transgênicas, que reúnem características específicas com o fim de atender a necessidades dos produtores. A cana-de-açúcar, bem como todas as outras cultivares transgênicas hoje existentes no Brasil, são protegidas pela Lei de Proteção de Cultivares (LPC) Lei n. 9.456, de 25 de abril de 1997, lei esta feita com base nos termos propostos pelo Tratado da UPOV, em sua versão de 1978, união da qual o Brasil passou a fazer parte após a elaboração da referida lei. A LPC, contudo, trouxe em seu texto uma exceção à cana-de-açúcar, que não recebe o mesmo tratamento que as outras cultivares no país, mas sim um tratamento superior, que institui um super regime de proteção à cultivar da cana-de-açúcar, não se aplicando ao seu regime de proteção as exceções cabíveis a todas as outras cultivares, inclusive as exceções tratadas no texto da UPOV 1978. O presente trabalho discorre sobre o regime de propriedade intelectual da cana-de-açúcar no país, e aborda desde a introdução das primeiras espécies de cana no país, trazidas pelos colonizadores, e sua influência na lavoura, economia e cultura do Brasil, até os dias atuais, com a análise da evolução histórica tanto da cultivar em si, como de sua regulação pelo Estado brasileiro, inclusive pelos órgãos especializados criados ao longo da história para cuidar da cultura e comercialização da cana-de-açúcar. É feita ainda análise da legislação atual que rege a proteção à tecnologia da cana-de-açúcar no país, a Lei de Proteção de Cultivares, com breve histórico de sua elaboração, e suas determinações frente ao texto da UPOV 1978. Também são abordados aspectos relacionados ao impacto desse regime especial no mercado de cultivar no país, e eventuais efeitos desse regime, principalmente relacionados à concorrência e ao eventual abuso de direito. Com isso, pretende-se estabelecer quais são os parâmetros que efetivamente regem a proteção às cultivares transgênicas de cana-de-açúcar, e seus aspectos que extrapolam ou não os limites legais impostos pelo ordenamento jurídico nacional. / Sugarcane is the most important farming in the formation of Brazil as we know: it is found in the country since the emerging of the Portuguese Colony until nowadays, and played main role in the agribusiness in several moments of history. We main point out then that the plant of sugarcane itself has essential part in this farming, because from it comes the products derived of sugarcane sugar, sugarcane alcohol and, more recently, biomass electric energy. As many other cultures, sugarcane had a diversification of species along time in order to prevent plagues, plant diseases, to adapt to different climate and soil conditions, timing of production, increase of efficiency, to fit to new planting techniques, and many of these changes (the great majority, sincerely) are product of research that allowed the creation of several transgenic species, which gather specific characteristics aiming to fulfill the needs of producers. Sugarcane, as the other transgenic plants existing in Brazil, found themselves under the protection of the Cultivar Protection Law (CPL) Law n. 9.456, dated April 25, 1997, law based on the terms of UPOV 1978 Treaty, Union of which Brazil is part nowadays under such terms. CPL, nevertheless, conferred an exception to some of its terms to sugarcane, which do not get the same treatment as the other transgenic plants in the country, but has a superior regimen, which confers a super protection to sugarcane transgenic plants, to which do not apply the exceptions that affect all other transgenic plants, including the exceptions contained in UPOV 1978. This paper aims to discuss the regimen of intellectual property of sugarcane in Brazil, and examines since the introduction of first species of sugarcane in the country, brought by the Portuguese, and its influence in the farming, economy and culture in Brazil, until nowadays, examining the historical evolution of the plant itself, as well as of its regulation by the Brazilian State, including the specialized organs created through time to regulate the farming and commercialization of sugarcane. It is also made an analysis of laws and acts which regulate the protection of sugarcane technology in the country, the Cultivar Protection Law, with a brief examination of historical conditions and law making process of the CPL, and its directives considered from a UPOV 1978 point of view. Aspects related to the impact of such regulation in the market of sugarcane in Brazil are evaluated as well, including eventual effects of law dispositions, mostly related to antitrust aspects and abuse of rights. Therefore, it aims to stablish the parameters that effectively regulate the protection of transgenic sugarcane in Brazil, and the aspects that go beyond or do not the limits imposed by the Brazilian legal system.
28

Implantable surgical devices issues of product liability

Higgs, Robin JED, Law, Faculty of Law, UNSW January 2005 (has links)
Patients who have undergone treatment that has included the surgical implantation of a prosthetic device can become dissatisfied for many reasons. One cause for dissatisfaction is any adverse event where there is a demonstrable causal nexus with the failure of a device that is defective or at risk of being so. The magnitude of therapeutic product failure is considerable and therapeutic goods such as Vioxx, Thalidomide, silicon-gel-filled breast implants, contaminated blood products, cardiac pacemakers and valves, and orthopaedic devices are testimony to this. Many of these events have exposed a greyish area of Australian law that balances medical negligence with consumer protection and contract law. Australian product liability legislation that regulates the use of therapeutic goods is a complex amalgam of law that has at its foundations the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) and the Therapeutic Goods Act 1989 (Cth). When a surgical device fails there can be exposure to liability. This thesis explores those important issues that can impact on individuals or on organisations and it is evident that where issues of product liability concern implanted surgical devices the current regulations for consumer protection may not always be the most appropriate. It is evident that there is a culture of under-reporting of adverse events to a Therapeutic Good Administration that does not have the resources to investigate the cause for failure of a surgical device. Furthermore, there is a potential for bias and conflict of interest in an environment where the regulator depends on the regulated for the funding of its existence. Other issues include the complex and often undesirable consequences of those partnerships that can evolve with the development of an implantable device and with the undertaking of clinical trials, the role of the learned intermediary, that interface between manufacturer and consumer, and the role of the expert witness, that interface between justice and injustice. These and other matters that can significantly influence any debate of implantable surgical device product liability are explored and recommendations are made that might form the basis of a Therapeutic Goods (Safe Medical Devices) Amendment Act.
29

Tales from the trenches : the people, policies, and procedures of cultural resource management

Wilson, Michele L. 15 September 2000 (has links)
Since the late 1970s, archaeology has grown into an industry whose practitioners work in both public and private sectors. As an industry, modern archeology is commonly known as Cultural Resources Management, or CRM. CRM emerged from a surplus of employment opportunities made available to archeologists after the passing of National heritage legislation. This legislation defines the importance of discovering, documenting, and recovering the places and objects associated with people and events important to United States' history. As there are many different people who are considered to be important to United States' history (e.g., past presidents, Native Americans), there are as many different archeologists seeking to participate in its interpretation, each with various educational and experience backgrounds. While CRM has been successful in partially piecing back together history, its practitioners confront numerous challenges. These challenges are often associated with meeting the standards outlined by the legislation but also include challenges associated with industry personnel. In some cases, the industry's efforts to meet these standards have led to labor problems. As a result, many CRM employees today see a separation between industry managers and industry laborers that has made it increasingly difficult to fulfill the goals of the legislation and to ultimately contribute to our understanding of the past. Primarily, the role and contribution of field technicians to CRM is being debated by many CRM practitioners. This thesis explores the relationship between the two primary CRM personnel parties - the managers and laborers in an effort to define the labor problems confronting CRM personnel, how they have evolved, and what solutions are available to them (both managers and laborers). To this end, I surveyed industry managers and field technicians to better understand how each perceives the role of field technicians. Challenges confronting CRM personnel will be shown to partially stem from low industry wages, deficient safety policies and procedures, out-dated academic curricula, and a lack of communication between managers and field technicians. Investigations of the relationship between management and labor provide a unique opportunity to explore a multitude of questions related to CRM employment over the past two decades and in the future. / Graduation date: 2001
30

The Queen's Pier saga: unveiling the inconvenient truth of heritage conservation legislation in HongKong

Leung, Yee-wing, Yvonne., 梁綺穎. January 2010 (has links)
 With the increasing recognition of the importance of heritage conservation, it would not be adequate merely to control archaeological discoveries or to preserve items of historical interest. In this society where resources are scarce, rules have to be made for enabling the selection of what to keep and what not to, and if to be kept, how the heritage resources could be sufficiently protected. Under the present system, for instance, graded buildings afforded no legal protection save for Grade 1 buildings which may be qualified and ready to be declared as “monuments”. Also, there is no system for appeal if the building is graded against the owner’s will. Through the years, the Ordinance had not been reviewed to meet with the social development and has become obsolete and out-of-date. It is no longer able to give sufficient legal protection to the heritage conservation in Hong Kong. Following the Queen’s Pier incident and the Court of First Instance decision which will be discussed in details, the need for a more proper and comprehensive heritage protection legislation becomes more intense and imminent. One may recall that the Chief Executive had announced a range of initiatives on heritage conservation in the 2007-2008 Policy Address which was delivered on 10th October 2007. Yet, it is submitted that a policy initiative no matter how ambitious cannot be achieved without the foundation of a concrete legal framework. Objective standard and guidelines have to be established for future precedent. It is only by then certainty and sustainability on conservation can be achieved. The issues that we are going to discuss in this article is, by examining the development of heritage protection law of Hong Kong, whether Hong Kong, being part of China and a State Parties which have adhered to the World Heritage Convention, has afforded and taken sufficient legal measures in securing our cultural heritage. The recent judgment of the Court of First Instance has thrown light to the fact that our heritage legislation, namely the Antiquities and Monuments Ordinance is inadequate to safeguard some of the historically significant heritage in Hong Kong. There are of course counter-argument that conservation is a hindrance to urban development and possible impingement of private property right. In this dissertation, we will examine, from a legal point of view, how the legal framework of our system, insofar as heritage conservation is concerned, can be improved and/or modified or even advanced. / published_or_final_version / Conservation / Master / Master of Science in Conservation

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