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Security and Privacy Composant1 #391474 Enable the reduction of risk to life and liberties, especially in equality under the law for economic, social, familial and legal (justice) remedies with penalties and fines enforced upon any person by targeted attacks on any person by collection of personal information and any location, medical, education, justice or financial information including any motor vehicle or family court and patterns of spending. | - Perhaps the following materials will aid in the selection of the right solution for the right purpose
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+Citations (7) - CitationsAjouter une citationList by: CiterankMapLink[4] Global Privacy Resource Booklet
En citant: Global Privacy and Information Quality Working Group (GPIQWG) Publication info: 7/1/2011 Date Approved by GAC
1/4/2012 Last Revision Date Cité par: Lisa Martinez 5:03 PM 11 May 2015 GMT URL:
| Extrait - Thanks to the great work by the U.S. Department of Justice's (DOJ) Global, Global partners, and through DOJ collaborations with other federal agencies, there are a variety of privacy awareness, policy development, and implementation products available to the justice community today. To help these agencies know which privacy product(s) to use when and for what purpose, Global has published a roadmap for navigating through these resources in a Global Privacy Resources booklet. The road map graphically illustrates the stages an agency naturally goes through when embarking on such an endeavor, (such as education and awareness, self-assessment, policy development, technical implementation, and training). Each of these stages, together, comprises a Privacy Program Cycle. The Global Privacy Resources booklet graphically illustrates every stage of this cycle and guides agencies to the resources they need for each particular stage. Global recognizes that State, Local, and Tribal (SLT) justice entities come in all sizes, with a variety of roles and with varying degrees of available resources. The resources presented in this booklet are flexible and designed to meet a spectrum of privacy protection needs. In addition to this downloadable booklet, Global has also developed an online version of this information available at www.it.ojp.gov/privacy |
Link[5] Assessments for State, Local and Tribal Justice Entities
En citant: Global Privacy and Information Quality Working Group (GPIQWG) Publication info: 2/1/2009 Cité par: Lisa Martinez 5:05 PM 11 May 2015 GMT URL:
| Extrait - Practitioners are provided a framework with which to examine the privacy implications of their information systems and information sharing collaborations so they can design and implement privacy policies to address vulnerabilities identified through the assessment process. Privacy policies emerge as a result of the analysis performed during the Privacy Impact Assessment (PIA) process. In addition to an overview of the PIA process, this guide contains a template that leads policy developers through a series of appropriate PIA questions that evaluate the process through which personally identifiable information is collected, stored, protected, shared, and managed. The PIA questions are designed to reflect the same policy concepts as those recommended in the Privacy, Civil Rights, and Civil Liberties Policy Development Guide for State, Local, and Tribal Justice Entities, further supporting privacy policy development. |
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