GDPR in research

Cluster

Research & Valorization

Target Group

Members of the Doctoral Schools

Abstract

The new European privacy legislation, the GDPR, has been in place since 25 May 2018. This GDPR has consequences for the processing personal data in research and researchers also need to comply with these rules and requirements. This course will focus on the implementation of privacy and GDPR throughout the entire research life cycle.

Topic

The course will start with a theoretical background of the GDPR principles applied to a research context (3 hours). Researchers will be guided through the different phases of their research project and they will learn how to comply with the GDPR in each of these phases. In the second part of the course, we will discuss case studies/research projects that involve the processing of personal data with a focus on the practical implementation (3 hours). Doctoral students will also have the opportunity to work on their specific case with support from the lectures

Learning outcomes

By following this course doctoral students will learn how to deal with personal data and privacy in their specific doctoral project. Although the focus is GDPR in research and more specific on handling personal data in their doctoral research, knowledge about GDPR and privacy is also relevant for their further career inside and outside academia.

Teachers

  • Hanne Elsen graduated legal practice in Diepenbeek, Master in Laws in Antwerp and Master of Laws in Notarial Law in Ghent. In 2016 she started her professional career as a business lawyer at Hasselt University, focusing on the legal aspects of academic research. While doing so, she developed a particular interest and expertise in ethics, integrity and privacy. She therefore continued her career at Ghent University, where she is currently appointed as Data Protection Officer. She has also been assigned as an independent Ethics Expert to the European Commission and is an avid member of several working groups concerning privacy and ethics, such as the Flemish Interuniversity Council (VLIR) on GDPR.
  • Annik Leyman holds a Master in Sociology (2004, Ghent University) and Business Economics (2005, Ghent University). From 2006 to 2011 she worked as a researcher at the Policy Research Centre for R&D Indicators where she did research on Human Resources in Research (doctorates, doctoral careers and researchers’ mobility). Since 2011 she became part of the Policy and Quality Control Unit of the Research Department at Ghent University. As policy advisor she is, among other things, responsible for the implementation of research data management and GDPR.

Duration

1 day

Time schedule & Venue

 

Date Time Room/Venue

new session to be announced

 

 

Registration fee

Free of charge for Doctoral School members. The no show policy applies.

Registration

Follow this link: https://eventmanager.ugent.be/gdprinresearch Your registration will be confirmed by separate email from the Doctoral Schools.

If the course is fully booked, you can ask to be added to the waiting list by sending an e-mail to . Please mention your ID student nr.

Teaching material

Printout of slides

Number of participants

12

Language

English

Evaluation methods and criteria (doctoral training programme)

100% participation