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Gender, data protection & the smart city: Exploring the role of DPIA in achieving equality goals

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Abstract

When reflecting upon the role of law as an instrument influencing urban planning and shaping urban environments, the most immediate link is to environmental and urban legislation.
Nevertheless, data protection law is increasingly expected to affect the future development of urban realities in the European Union (EU). Being actual “data cities”, current smart cities have been significantly affected by the entry into force of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). In particular, the Data Protection Impact Assessment (DPIA) is increasingly portraited as a solution to address the countless fundamental rights  challenges arising from the personal data processing operations occurring in the context of smart cities, inter alia due to its participatory element. However, is DPIA a suitable approach to making smart cities more  inclusive, and specifically to empower women of diverse races, backgrounds, sexual orientations and abilities? Enquiry into the ways in which smart cities, where urban and data protection challenges merge, might 
exacerbate dynamics of oppression against women, and how European data protection law could address these challenges, is still lacking. The objective of this article is to begin such a discussion.

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Authors

Alessandra Calvi - Vrije Universiteit Brussel / CY Cergy Paris Université https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9734-8078

How to Cite
Calvi, A. (2022). Gender, data protection & the smart city: Exploring the role of DPIA in achieving equality goals. European Journal of Spatial Development, 19(3), 24–47. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6539249