My favourites

Chapter V – Transfers of personal data to third countries or international organisations (Art. 44-50)

Art. 44 GDPR - General principle for transfers arrow_right_alt

Art. 45 GDPR - Transfers on the basis of an adequacy decision arrow_right_alt

Art. 46 GDPR - Transfers subject to appropriate safeguards arrow_right_alt

Art. 47 GDPR - Binding corporate rules arrow_right_alt

Art. 48 GDPR - Transfers or disclosures not authorized by Union law arrow_right_alt

Art. 49 GDPR - Derogations for specific situations arrow_right_alt

Art. 50 GDPR - International cooperation for the protection of personal data arrow_right_alt

In relation to third countries and international organisations, the Commission and supervisory authorities shall take appropriate steps to:

    1. develop international cooperation mechanisms to facilitate the effective enforcement of legislation for the protection of personal data;
    2. provide international mutual assistance in the enforcement of legislation for the protection of personal data, including through notification, complaint referral, investigative assistance and information exchange, subject to appropriate safeguards for the protection of personal data and other fundamental rights and freedoms;
    3. engage relevant stakeholders in discussion and activities aimed at furthering international cooperation in the enforcement of legislation for the protection of personal data;
    4. promote the exchange and documentation of personal data protection legislation and practice, including on jurisdictional conflicts with third countries.
Related
Close tabsclose
  • 116

Recital 116

When personal data moves across borders outside the Union it may put at increased risk the ability of natural persons to exercise data protection rights in particular to protect themselves from the unlawful use or disclosure of that information. At the same time, supervisory authorities may find that they are unable to pursue complaints or conduct investigations relating to the activities outside their borders. Their efforts to work together in the cross-border context may also be hampered by insufficient preventative or remedial powers, inconsistent legal regimes, and practical obstacles like resource constraints. Therefore, there is a need to promote closer cooperation among data protection supervisory authorities to help them exchange information and carry out investigations with their international counterparts. For the purposes of developing international cooperation mechanisms to facilitate and provide international mutual assistance for the enforcement of legislation for the protection of personal data, the Commission and the supervisory authorities should exchange information and cooperate in activities related to the exercise of their powers with competent authorities in third countries, based on reciprocity and in accordance with this Regulation.