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» Go to news mainInternational Society for the Reform of Criminal Law conference will focus on cyber crime and privacy concerns
The Internet provides a new platform for criminal activity, from cyber-stalking and cyberbullying to Internet luring. This poses new and daunting challenges to law enforcement and legislation. The good news is that modern technology has also provided many new tools to fight crime, particularly in the areas of surveillance and information sharing. Underpinning all of it, however, is concern about whether law-enforcement tools are too invasive of individual privacy, even as they serve the greater good of combatting crime.
Those and other cyber-crime topics will be covered at the upcoming 29th annual , taking place from July 24 to 28 at Halifaxās World Trade and Convention Centre. Its theme is Protecting Privacy: Domestic and International Criminal Justice Responses to Crimes Against Personal Privacy and the Balance Between Individual Privacy and Collective Security.
The conference will examine and debate the challenges that privacy concerns and technological change pose to international and criminal justice systems. Topics include international collaboration in the fight against cyber crime; the human rights implications of sharing personal information across national borders; and the boundaries of surveillance, search, and seizure.
Because so much of cyber crime is borderless, you have to come up with tools of collaboration across countries. ā Professor Rob Currie, Director, Law & Technology Institute
Chairing the conference are the Hon. Justice Thomas Cromwell of the Supreme Court of Canada and the Hon. Chief Justice Michael MacDonald (LLB ā79) of the Nova Scotia Court of Appeal. Schulich School of Law , who is Director of our (LATI), is an ISRCL member and on the conferenceās program committee, along with . Currie and Coughlan have written about social media and the law for the Canadian Journal of Law and Technology, which LATI produces and Carswell publishes.
Our alumni who are members of the conferenceās program committee are: The Hon. Justice Joshua Arnold (LLB ā89) of the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia; The Hon. Justice Duncan Beveridge (LLB ā78) of the Nova Scotia Court of Appeal; David Bright (LLB ā72), QC, of Boyne Clarke; The Hon. Judge Elizabeth Buckle (LLB ā92) of the Provincial and Family Courts of Nova Scotia; The Hon. Justice Pat Duncan (LLB ā79) of the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia; Ann Marie (McDougall) Simmons (LLB ā83), Public Prosecution Service of Canada.
Privacy concerns cross borders
The speakers are coming from Australia, Ireland, Nigeria, Jamaica, Georgia, South Africa, and the United States ā and from Canada and Schulichās own backyard. On July 25, Coughlan will chair the panel How Is Technology Invading Our Privacy? On July 26, Schulich Law ā who was recently appointed a LATI faculty member ā will present on the Cyber Bullies and Cyber Stalking panel and the Young Justice Professionals ProgramāSexual Assault Reform.
On July 27, Currie will be part of the panel examining Hot Topics in Criminal Law, and the next day heāll discuss Search and Seizure: Recent Developments. Last year he attended the ISRCLās conference in Edinburgh, where he was also a presenter; he expects to see many of the same attendees at this event. āThe criminal law world is fairly tight-knit, even on an international basis,ā he says. āAnd because so much of cyber crime is borderless, you have to come up with tools of collaboration across countries.ā
All of the speakers are renowned in their fields of expertise. Some key figures include:
ā¢ David Fraser, a leading Canadian privacy lawyer and LATI faculty member who teaches Internet and Media Law at Schulich
ā¢ Roger Clark from Rutgers Law School, one of the most senior international criminal law academics in the world
ā¢ Mark Fenhalls, QC, deputy head of Chambers and chairman of the Criminal Bar Association in London, England
ā¢ The Hon. Justice Chima Centus Nweze of the Supreme Court of Nigeria
Sharing ideas and knowledge
Currie is looking forward to delivering his two 20-minute presentations. āI want to throw out my ideas and hear what other people think of them,ā he says. āI also want to listen to other peopleās experiences. The goal is to share ideas and knowledge and compare approaches.ā
Thereās no question that those attending the conference will benefit from the fresh connections and networks theyāll forge. āItās really helpful for people to make new contacts, especially those from other countries,ā says Currie. āIf Iām writing a piece comparing three countries and Iāve met someone at the conference from one of those countries, we might end up writing something together or pursuing another type of academic collaboration.ā
Law enforcement is always trying to hit a moving target in terms of coming up with technological and legal tools to combat cyber crime. ā Professor Rob Currie
For example, at last yearās ISRCL conference in Edinburgh, Currie met Jonathan Clough, a law professor at the Clayton campus of Monash University in Australia, who later published an article in the Canadian Journal of Law & Technology. Itās also useful for prosecutors to know someone in another country they can call when theyāre working on a case.
This conference will be far from the last one that will be held on this theme. āLaw enforcement is always trying to hit a moving target in terms of coming up with technological and legal tools to combat cyber crime,ā says Currie. āItās something the legal profession is always going to have to keep on top of.ā
Click for more information on the ISRCL conference or to register for it.
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