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The selected candidate will contribute to the research program ‘From Regulating Human Behavior to Regulating Data’. This project is part of the Digital Legal Studies track within the sector plan for Dutch Law Schools funded by the Ministry of Education, Culture and Science. This position fits within the project 'Concepts in a data-centric regulatory paradigm’, subproject ‘Consent and contracts’.
An increasing number of contracts in the so-called data economy requires that personal data is provided in some way by the buyer of goods and services. Consumers who make online purchases, who buy apps and other digital content, or who set up social media accounts, agree to provide the suppliers of those goods and services with all kinds of data about themselves and their preferences. However, often the use of data goes beyond what consumers thought they had agreed to and not always in beneficial ways. At the same time information about the consumers is collected in order to offer them targeted advertisements and create profiles.
Both consumer law and data protection refer to consent and contracts in all facets of users’ interaction within the data economy, while processing of personal data is increasingly carried out under the legitimate interests of the data controller. The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) in particular provides for a limited list of grounds based on which personal data can be collected and processed; processing is lawful, among others, when the data subject has given consent to the processing of their personal data for one or more specific purposes (Art. 6(1)(a) GDPR), when the processing is necessary for the performance of a contract to which the data subject is party or in order to take steps at the request of the data subject prior to entering into a contract (Art. 6(1)(c) GDPR) and when the processing is necessary for the purposes of the legitimate interest pursued by the controller or by a third party (Art. 6(1)(f) GDPR). Relying on any of these grounds in the context of online transaction is not free of interpretation and application difficulties.
This particular research aims at creating a theoretical framework for the grounds that render data processing legitimate in online transactions. The project shall examine, among others, the relation between Art. 6(1)(a) and Art. 6(1)(c) GDPR, explore when 6(1)(c) GDPR can be relied upon as a legitimate ground instead of consent and investigate when Art. 6(1)(f) GDPR can be relied upon, especially in light of Recital 47 GDPR.
Research (0,8 fte)
Teaching (0,2 FTE)
Tilburg University believes that academic excellence is achieved through the combination of outstanding research and education, in which social impact is made by sharing knowledge. In doing so, we recognize that excellence is not only achieved through individual performance, but mostly through team effort in which each team member acts as a leader connecting people.
Applicants must:
Fixed-term contract: The total duration of the PhD trajectory is four years (48 months) and 1.0 fte.
Tilburg University offers excellent terms of employment. We believe flexibility, development, and good employee benefits are very important. We make clear agreements on career paths and offer all kinds of facilities and schemes to maintain an optimum balance between work and private life. Tilburg University fosters diversity and inclusion; that is why we pursue an active policy for inclusive teams where diverse talents can flourish.
Selected candidates will be ranked in the Dutch university employment system (UFO). The starting gross salary is € 2395,- per month (for a full-time appointment) and will raise every 12 months to a maximum of € 3061,- based on the PhD salary scale of the Collective Labor Agreement Dutch Universities. Tilburg University actively promotes equal and transparent salary between men and women by strictly applying predetermined parameters based on the candidate’s experience. Employees recruited from abroad may be eligible for the 30% tax facility- this means that 30% of your salary will be paid as a tax-free reimbursement.
The total duration of the PhD trajectory is four years (48 months) and 1.0 fte. You will initially be appointed for a fixed period of 16 months. After 12 months, an evaluation will take place. If the performance evaluation is positive, your employment contract will be extended for the remaining period of 32 months.
You are entitled to a holiday allowance amounting to 8% and a year-end bonus of 8.3% of your gross yearly income. If you work 40 hours per week, you receive 41 days of paid recreational leave per year. Please visit Working at Tilburg University for more information on our employment conditions.
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