Presentation
This symposium will explore the regulatory framework of facial recognition and the challenges posed by law enforcement's deployment of this technology in three distinct phases.
The first part delves into normative dynamics : what underlies them, accelerates them, and contributes to their institutionalization in public spaces.
The second provides a legislative overview within Europe - at the national and regional levels - and offers a comparative perspective with North America.
Lastly, the third part opens up perspectives by offering various reflections on the future of surveillance technologies.
Programme
Thursday 13 March
8.30 : Welcome
Eva Mouial-Bassilana, Université Côte d’Azur, France
Caroline Lequesne, Université Côte d’Azur, France
9.00 : Policing, surveillance and human rights in the age of AI
Keynote : Pete Fussey, University of Southampton, United Kingdom
10.00 : Break
Normative dynamics of facial recognition
Chair : Pauline Türk, Université Côte d’Azur
10.30 : From private surveillance to public protection : the pervasive interplay
Mehdi Ghassemi, Malik Bozzo-Rey, Université Catholique de Lille, France
Acculturation and acceleration : the case of sport and cultural events
Rosamunde Van Brakel, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium
An institutional perspective from a data protection authority
Guido Scorza, Garante per la protezione dei dati personali, Roma
12.00 : Lunch
The european regulatory frameworks for facial recognition
Chair : Céline Castets-Renard, Université d’Ottawa, Canada
13.30 : From led to the AI act
Catherine Jasserand, University of Groningen, Netherlands
Facial recognition before the european court of human rights
Francesca Palmiotto, IE University of Madrid, Spain
Facial recognition rules, from national legislations to international standards
Workshop I – Experiments : under the radar ?
14.30 : Chair : Caroline Lequesne, Université Côte d’Azur, France
With :
David Egea Villalba, Universidad de Murcia, Spain
Pete Fussey, University of Southampton, United Kingdom
Kouroupis Konstantinos, Frederik University, Greece
16.00 : Break
Facial recognition rules, from national legislations to international standards
Workshop II - Accountability and trust
16.30 : Chair : Yvonne-Marie Rogez, Université Paris-Panthéon-Assas, France
With :
Claude Castelluccia, French Data Protection Authority (CNIL), France
Leah West, Carleton University, Canada
Thomas Wischmeyer, University of Bielefeld, Germany
18.00 : End of the 1th day
Friday 14 March
8.30 : Welcome
Angelo Giuseppe Orofino, Università Lum, Italy
Julián Valero Torrijos, Universidad de Murcia, Spain, for ERDAL
Normalizing facial recognition technology and the end of obscurity
9.00 : Keynote : Woodrow Hartzog, Boston University School of Law
Evan Selinger, Rochester Institute of Technology - Department of Philosophy, United States
10.00 : Break
Doctoral seminar
Chair : Eva Mª Menendez Sebastian, Universidad de Oviedo, Spain
10.30 : The long-term safety issue of facial recognition’s security growth
Amélie Turci, Université de Rennes - Université d’Ottawa, France - Canada
The population’s global surveillance infrastructure in the covid-19 pandemic : challenges for and transformations of the rule of law
Charly Derave, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium
Biometric authentication for the digitization of administrative procedures
Ginevra Munafò, Tor Vergata University of Rome, Italy
Informal political process and public law : a perspective from japan
Haruki Kadotani, Keio University, Japan
12.30 : Lunch
Facial recognition rules : from national legislations to international standards
Workshop III - Law enforcement perspectives
14.00 : Chair : Rosamunde Van Brakel, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium
With :
Matúš Mesarčík, Comenius University, Slovakia
Katie Kinsey, The Policing Project, New-York
Général Patrick Perrot, Coordonnateur Intelligence Artificielle pour la Gendarmerie et conseiller IA auprès du Comcyber du Ministère de l’Intérieur
15.30 : Break
New frontiers in law enforcement technologies
Chair : Ugo Bellagamba, Université Côte d’Azur
16.00 : Smart and safe cities
Céline Castets Renard, Université d’Ottawa, Canada
From identification to mass surveillance
Yvonne-Marie Rogez, Université Paris-Panthéon-Assas, France
17.30 : Conclusions
Karen Yeung, Birmingham University - Law School
18.00 : Closure
Tarifs :
Etudiants extérieurs UniCA 1 jour : 80€
Etudiants extérieurs UniCA 2 jours : 120€
Professionnels extérieurs UniCA 1 jour : 170€
Professionnels extérieurs UniCA 2 jour : 300€
Supplément diner de gala 13 mars : 75€
Les sessions sont accessibles gratuitement aux étudiants d'Université Côte d'Azur, sous réserve d'inscription auprès de : laurence.gervasoni@univ-cotedazur.fr et catherine.chevance@univ-cotedazur.fr
Registration (deadline : 1er mars 2025) : https://unica.azur-colloque.fr/inscription/fr/137/inscription
Colloque organisé par le GREDEG, Université de Côte d'Azur sous la direction scientifique de Caroline Lequesne, Maître de conférences HDR en droit public, Université Côte d'Azur