Prioritising Command-and-Control Over Collaborative Governance : The Role of the Information Regulator Under the Protection of Personal Information Act
Abstract
Although the Protection of Personal Information Act 4 of 2013
(POPIA) wholeheartedly adopts the command-and-control
features of the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR),
POPIA does not include many of the collaborative governance
mechanisms in the GDPR. POPIA dilutes the accountability
requirements in the GDPR. It rarely requires responsible parties
to generate or keep documentation and there is no equivalent of
European Data Protection Impact Assessments in the South
African Act. This affects the regulation of automated processing
that involves profiling. The European system of certifications is
also not included in POPIA. POPIA includes a system of codes
of conduct but even they have a more peremptory nature. The
absence of collaborative governance mechanisms in POPIA
constitutes a missed opportunity to build a culture of enhanced
data protection in South Africa. The Information Regulator has
the task of giving many exemptions and prior approvals under
the Act. The newly constituted Information Regulator will find
itself exposed as it faces a particularly difficult mandate.
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- PER: 2022 Volume 25 [68]