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Invite colleaguesNew directions for data governance in health data? Examining the role of anonymisation and pseudonymisation
Abstract
Data governance can be considered a commonly shared priority for many organisations. This paper examines the roles of anonymisation and pseudonymisation as privacy-enhancing technologies (‘PETs’) as part of data governance focusing on the health and medical sector. Ultimately, it asks whether organisations should reframe their data governance to favour anonymisation or pseudonymisation respectively. To that, the paper concludes that while both anonymisation and pseudonymisation appear important technical tools, they ought to be understood as part of the wider frame of data governance, where no stand-alone tool seems to suffice. Rather, a wider outlook that also includes organisational and legal measures is needed. Regarding the latter, the guidance seems to proliferate, and in those, reasonable protective measures, along with risk-based approaches, appear common.
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Author's Biography
Anna Aurora Wennäkoski is a doctoral student in law at the University of Helsinki, Finland. She holds a master’s degree in law from both the University of Helsinki, Finland and the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law, New York She has studied law also at the Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne. Anna has wide practical legal experience from working at various international companies in France, the United States and Finland. Currently, she works in the EU and International Affairs unit at the Finnish Ministry of Justice.