TY - BOOK AU - Maguire,Rachael TI - Information Rights for Records Managers SN - 1783302461 AV - KD3756 .M375 2019eb U1 - 342.410662 PY - 2018/// CY - London PB - Facet Publishing KW - Freedom of information KW - Great Britain KW - Government information KW - Public records KW - Law and legislation KW - Data protection KW - Liberté d'information KW - Grande-Bretagne KW - Information sur l'État KW - LAW KW - Constitutional KW - bisacsh KW - Public KW - fast KW - Electronic books N1 - 5 Data protection: rights of data subjects; Intro; Title page; Contents; Acknowledgements; 1 Introduction to information rights law; Introduction; What is information rights law?; What else is available?; Who works in information rights law?; General access to information; Access to personal information; Access to environmental information; Conclusion; 2 Freedom of information; Introduction; Handling requests: the basic method; The right to information: section 1; Identifying a request: section 8; Logging the request; Determining who has the information and forwarding the request to them; Requesting clarification and defining scope: section 16/15 duty to advise and assistReminders; Drafting the response and sign-off; Conclusion; 3 Freedom of information exemptions; Introduction; Refusing the request due to an exemption; Section 12, The cost limit; Section 21 (FoIA)/25 (FoISA), Information already available; Section 22 (FoIA)/27 (FoISA), Information due for publication and research; Sections 23, 24, 25, 26 (FoIA)/section 31 (FoISA), Security bodies, national security and defence; Section 27 (FoIA)/section 32 (FoISA), International relations; Section 28, Relations within the UK; Section 29 (FoIA)/section 33(2) (FoISA), The economySection 30 (FoIA)/section 34 (FoISA), Investigations and proceedings conducted by a [Scottish] public authority; Section 31 (FoIA)/section 35 (FoISA), Law enforcement; Section 32 (FoIA)/section 37 (FoISA), Court records, etc.; Section 33 (FoIA)/section 40 (FoISA), Audit functions; Section 34, Parliamentary privilege; Section 35 (FoIA)/section 29 (FoISA), Formulation of government/Scottish administration policy; Section 36, Prejudice to the effective conduct of public affairs; Section 37 (FoIA)/section 41(FoISA), Communications with Her Majesty, etc. and HonoursSection 38 (FoIA)/section 39(1) (FoISA), Health and safety; Section 39 (FoIA)/section 39(2) (FoISA), Environmental information; Section 40 (FoIA)/section 38 (FoISA), Personal information; Section 41 (FoIA)/section 36(2) (FoISA), Information provided in confidence/Confidentiality; Section 42 (FoIA)/section 36(1) (FoISA), Legal professional privilege; Section 43 (FoIA)/section 33 (FoISA), Commercial interests; Section 44 (FoIA)/section 26 (FoISA), Prohibitions on disclosure; Section 14, Vexatious and repeated requestsWriting the refusal notice; Dealing with complaints and follow-up requests; Publication schemes and disclosure logs; Conclusion; 4 Data protection: principles and main features; Introduction; Regulations and Directives; Data protection main features; What is personal data?; Definitions; The data protection principles; Previous principles turned articles; Conditions for processing/lawfulness of processing; Special categories of personal data; Data controllers, joint data controllers and data processors; Data controller responsibilities; Conclusion N2 - Records Managers have tended to find themselves given the responsibility for managing requests under the Freedom of Information (FOI) and Data Protection Acts (DPA), without necessarily having training and/or an academic background in legal studies. This book aims to fill this knowledge gap UR - https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=1817114 ER -