Law of Professional-Client Confidentiality 2e

£126.69

Law of Professional-Client Confidentiality 2e

Regulating the Disclosure of Confidential Information

Privacy law Data protection law

Authors: Rosemary Pattenden, Duncan Sheehan

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Language: English

Published by: OUP Oxford

Published on: 3rd March 2016

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 1 Mb

ISBN: 9780191648649


Introduction

This book examines the disclosure and withholding of all forms of confidential information handled by professionals. Fully revised and updated, the new edition examines the numerous recent developments in the law, particularly following revelations by the media of the interception of professional confidences by phone hacking and other means. Its primary focus is on the law of England and Wales, but it includes insights from the secondary literature and case law of Australia, Canada, Ireland, New Zealand, and Scotland. This allows it to predict how English courts may fill gaps in the law, and makes it a useful resource for practitioners in other common law jurisdictions.

Basic Principles of Confidentiality

The book begins with a discussion of the basic principles of confidentiality, including types of confidential information, confidentiality obligations, disclosures, and confidentiality obligation.

Part I: Legal Instruments for Enforcement

Part I examines the legal instruments for the enforcement of confidentiality, including contractual obligations, tort of misuse of private information, equitable wrongs, actions against third parties, civil remedies and criminal offences, and remedies beyond the courts.

Part II: Justified Disclosure

Part II discusses justified disclosure, including those relating to public interest, official investigations, administration of justice, consent and waiver, and lapsed confidentiality.

Part III: Grounds for Justified Non-Disclosure

Part III analyses the grounds for justified non-disclosure, including legal professional privilege, public interest immunity, contractual or equitable obligations, data protection and freedom of information, privacy protection, and non-disclosure to client.

Part IV: Limiting Lawful Disclosure

Finally, Part IV discusses limiting the extent of a lawful disclosure, dealing with circulation restrictions, public reporting, anonymity, court attendance restrictions, and collateral use.

This is an essential reference for those advising either the professional or the individual client on issues relating to the disclosure of confidential personal information.

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