Consumer credit information systems are the tools used by the majority of lenders to manage credit risk, with lenders accessing credit reference databases managed by third party providers to evaluate a consumer’s credit application. So far, the subject of consumer credit reporting has been left to the predominant attention of the economic and business management scholarship and little or no consideration has been paid by lawyers.
This book aims to rectify this examining the legal framework and compliance in the European Community (EC) of such consumer information sharing arrangements which have become increasingly integrated in the credit granting practices of the Member States.
Thebook looks at the laws which surround and affect consumer credit reporting, including bank secrecy obligations. Consumer credit reporting and its relationship to human rights is also explored, as every individual is in the EC is entitled to informational privacy.
The book asks questions such as to what extent should the privacy of consumers be balanced against the aims and functions of consumer credit reporting, and how do the financial information sharing arrangements comply with the positive law, particularly the European data protection legislation?
![]() Vol 13 No 11
Nov/December 2008
Cover: Detail from Priscilla Coleman’s work in “Court Scenes” Major New Titles published in November (pp. 1-29) Inner Temple Book Prize Shortlist (p. 31) November Subs & Supplements (pp. 33-44) Middle Temple Library 50th Birthday (p. 44) Wigs & Wherefores Launch (pp. 45-46) Forthcoming Publications (pp. 48-51) WS&H Publications (pp. 52-64) |
William Blackstone: Law and Letters in the Eighteenth CenturyEdited by:
ISBN: 0199550298
ISBN13: 9780199550296
Published: October 2008
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Country of Publication: UK
Binding: Hardback
Price: £29.99
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