2019
DOI: 10.1177/0306312719846557
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Impossible, unknowable, accountable: Dramas and dilemmas of data law

Abstract: On May 25, 2018, the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) came into force. EU citizens are granted more control over personal data while companies and organizations are charged with increased responsibility enshrined in broad principles like transparency and accountability. Given the scope of the regulation, which aims to harmonize data practices across 28 member states with different concerns about data collection, the GDPR has significant consequences for individuals in the EU and globa… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…They analyze how epidemiological risk scores work as ‘accountability devices’ and show how they, despite their algorithmic character, continue to be in the making. Cool (2019) explores what she terms ‘accountability anxiety’ as a particular reaction among population researchers in Sweden to European data regulation and potentially conflicting demands of data protection and data sharing – thus showing how researchers negotiate the burden of compliance, legal uncertainties, and ethical concerns. Hoeyer (2019) discusses the politics of personalized medicine in the hyper-digitalized Danish healthcare system and suggests that data might be useful not so much for the information they convey, but for the way in which they deliver a promise of future knowledge, one that serves to postpone calls for present action on inequality in health.…”
Section: An Sts Of and For Public Healthmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…They analyze how epidemiological risk scores work as ‘accountability devices’ and show how they, despite their algorithmic character, continue to be in the making. Cool (2019) explores what she terms ‘accountability anxiety’ as a particular reaction among population researchers in Sweden to European data regulation and potentially conflicting demands of data protection and data sharing – thus showing how researchers negotiate the burden of compliance, legal uncertainties, and ethical concerns. Hoeyer (2019) discusses the politics of personalized medicine in the hyper-digitalized Danish healthcare system and suggests that data might be useful not so much for the information they convey, but for the way in which they deliver a promise of future knowledge, one that serves to postpone calls for present action on inequality in health.…”
Section: An Sts Of and For Public Healthmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…How public health law, policy, and practice operate is profoundly shaped by the social and material infrastructures through which data on health needs are generated and populations come into being as objects of knowledge. This special issue presents examples from infrastructures and practices enacted: in the US (Hogle, 2019), the UK (Pickersgill, 2019), Sweden (Cool, 2019), Germany (Amelang and Bauer, 2019; Kalender and Holmberg, 2019), Denmark (Hoeyer, 2019), and through international, partly commercial, networks (Kerr et al, 2019). We illustrate the diversity of practices in different public health settings to illustrate how STS can investigate technologically mediated construction of populations and the translation of this knowledge into societal action.…”
Section: What Is Public Health and Why Is It Important For Sts?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While it is recognized that participation in research is based on affirmative, unambiguous, voluntary, informed, and specific consent (Mendelson, 2018), people with advanced dementia or intellectual and developmental disabilities are not able to give informed consent or understand the consequences of data acquisition (Friedman and Rizzolo, 2017;Chalghoumi et al, 2019;Timmers et al, 2019). Article 6 of the GDPR addresses this issue by including provisions that protecting persons with dementia and their relatives from being coerced into providing consent without awareness of how their data will be used (Cool, 2019;Crutzen et al, 2019). Despite this regulation, local legislation differs between European countries (de Lange et al, 2019).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition to one with our colleague, who conducted the validation of the PSFS for the municipality, the interviews included five people working with reablement data infrastructures in the municipality, and two working with national standards. During this period, political uses of data became subject to what Cool (2019) has termed increased “accountability anxiety.” Consequently, some of our informants have had to insist on strict protection of their identity. It illustrates the difficulties staff have with speaking against the interpretation and use of data that management claims, but, unfortunately, it means that we have had to present this material with less transparency than what would have been academically desirable.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%