Reconsidering the Premises of Labour Law: Prolegomena to an EU Regulation on the Protection of Employees' Personal Data

With its 1985 Directive on Data Protection, the European Union highlighted its commitment to the constitutionalisation of European law and, in particular, underlined its vision of the individual European as a rights‐bearing individual; empowered through ‘knowledge’ and thus advantaged in communicative processes of political/social/legal bargaining. As such, the move to a data protection regime founded upon notions of individual empowerment, also mirrors a recent and fundamental re‐alignment in the guiding principles of regulative labour law, which has seen the paradigm of ‘collective laissez‐faire’ challenged, if not superseded, by a redirected emphasis upon the communicative empowerment of the individual employee rather than the representative function of employees’ representatives. Accordingly, it is less than surprising that the field of labour law has seen increasing demands placed upon the Commission to fulfil its promise in the pre‐amble to the 1985 Directive, and promulgate Regulations crafted to ensure data protection in line with the specific demands of individual societal sectors. This paper is a policy statement. It re‐iterates the need for a Regulation on the protection of employees’ data. Building on the comparative experience of the Member States, it outlines the nature, provisions and scope which such a regulation should entail so as to reflect, both the reality of the modern employment relationship, and a new normative vision of the workplace which aims to inject such relationships with a measure of communicative participation.