Volume 11, Issue 1 271042 pp. 490-502
Open Access

Mobility Should Be Fun. A Consumer (Law) Perspective on Border Check Technology

Paul De Hert

Paul De Hert

LSTS - Vrije Universiteit Brussels (Free University of Brussels), Belgium , vub.ac.be

TILT- University of Tilburg, The Netherlands , tilburguniversity.edu

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Rocco Bellanova

Corresponding Author

Rocco Bellanova

LSTS - Vrije Universiteit Brussels (Free University of Brussels), Belgium , vub.ac.be

CReSPo - Facultés Universitaires Saint-Louis (Brussels), Belgium , fusl.ac.be

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First published: 15 December 2010
Academic Editor: Fotini-Niovi Pavlidou

Abstract

After 9/11, states looked at transportation as if it was a matter of paying taxes: “We cannot make it fun, but we can make it efficient.” When traveling, we are asked to pass on data, give body samples, and pass through body scanners in the name of the general interest and in the name of our safety. Technology complements existing human checks and controls. Here we take a fresh look at the new security apparatuses and make transportation of humans more passenger-centered. Consumer protection law might help to complement the existing use of data protection law principles by citizen organizations. It should be possible to satisfy consumer needs, without forgetting the perspective of the citizen.

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