Mass Surveillance of Personal Data by EU Member States and its
Compatibility with EU Law
Author(s): Didier Bigo, Sergio Carrera, Nicholas Hernanz, Julien
Jeandesboz, Joanna Parkin, Francesco Ragazzi , Amandine Scherrer
In: Justice and Home Affairs, Liberty and Security in Europe Papers
Date: 06 November 2013
Pages: 67
Free PDF
http://www.ceps.eu/book/mass-surveillance-personal-data-eu-member-states-and-its-compatibility-eu-law
In the wake of the disclosures surrounding PRISM and other US
surveillance programmes, this paper assesses the large-scale
surveillance practices by a selection of EU member states: the UK,
Sweden, France, Germany and the Netherlands. Given the large-scale
nature of these practices, which represent a reconfiguration of
traditional intelligence gathering, the paper contends that an
analysis of European surveillance programmes cannot be reduced to a
question of the balance between data protection versus national
security, but has to be framed in terms of collective freedoms and
democracy. It finds that four of the five EU member states selected
for in-depth examination are engaging in some form of large-scale
interception and surveillance of communication data, and identifies
parallels and discrepancies between these programmes and the NSA-run
operations. The paper argues that these programmes do not stand
outside the realm of EU intervention but can be analysed from an EU
law perspective via i) an understanding of national security in a
democratic rule of law framework where fundamental human rights and
judicial oversight constitute key norms; ii) the risks posed to the
internal security of the Union as a whole as well as the privacy of
EU citizens as data owners and iii) the potential spillover into the
activities and responsibilities of EU agencies. The paper then
presents a set of policy recommendations to the European
Parliament.
Didier Bigo is Director of the Centre d’Etudes sur les Conflits,
Liberté et Sécurité (CCLS) and Professor at Sciences-Po Paris and
King’s College London. Sergio Carrera is Senior Research Fellow and
Head of the Justice and Home Affairs Section, Centre for European
Policy Studies. Nicholas Hernanz is Research Assistant, Justice and
Home Affairs Section, CEPS. Julien Jeandesboz is Assistant Professor
at the University of Amsterdam and Associate Researcher at CCLS.
Joanna Parkin is a Researcher, Justice and Home Affairs Section,
CEPS. Francesco Ragazzi is Assistant Professor in International
Relations, Leiden University. Amandine Scherrer is European Studies
Coordinator and Associate Researcher at CCLS.