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#Verena Moser
b2bcybersecurity · 2 years
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Anwendung des IT-Sicherheitsgesetzes 2.0 in der Praxis
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Der Bundesverband IT-Sicherheit e.V. (TeleTrusT) veranstaltet am 21.09.2022 in Berlin den jährlichen IT-Sicherheitsrechtstag, in dem die aktuelle Rechtslage bzw. Rechtsetzungs-, Implementierungs- und Zertifizierungsinitiativen vorgestellt und erörtert werden. Im Fokus steht die erneut praktische Anwendung des IT-Sicherheitsgesetzes 2.0. Das IT-Sicherheitsgesetz 2.0 (ITSIG) wirft eine Reihe von Fragen politischer, rechtlicher, technischer und organisatorischer Art auf, die nach Kommentierung rufen. Der Rechtsmaterie entsprechend muss die Analyse interdisziplinär, das heißt aus rechtlichem, politischem und technischem Blickwinkel erfolgen. Dieser Interdisziplinarität ist der Bundesverband IT-Sicherheit verpflichtet. Worauf es beim IT-Sicherheitsgesetz 2.0 ankommt RA Karsten U. Bartels, LL.M., stellvertretender TeleTrusT-Vorstandsvorsitzender und Leiter der TeleTrusT-AG "Recht": "Die Umsetzung der rechtlichen Anforderungen in der IT-Sicherheit wird immer komplexer - rechtlich, technisch und organisatorisch. Wir erläutern und diskutieren auf dem 7. TeleTrusT-IT-Sicherheitsrechtstag deshalb offen und praxisbezogen, worauf es beim IT-Sicherheitsgesetz 2.0 und der DSGVO besonders ankommt. Zudem werfen wir einen Blick auf die nationale Sicherheit und die Perspektiven der Aufsichtsbehörden und der Zertifizierer." Die Veranstaltung ist praxisnah angelegt, um jedem Interessenten die Möglichkeit zu geben, sich über die aktuelle Gesetzeslage zu informieren, die Möglichkeiten der rechtskonformen Umsetzung kennenzulernen und dabei wertvolle Kontakte zu knüpfen. Daher richtet sich der TeleTrusT-"IT-Sicherheitsrechtstag" an Interessierte aus Unternehmen und öffentlichen Einrichtungen und Behörden jeder Größe. Die Veranstaltung findet am 21.09.2022 in Berlin ab 09:30 Uhr statt im Hotel Courtyard by Marriott Berlin, Axel-Springer-Straße 55, 10117 Berlin. Referentinnen und Referenten - RA Verena Jackson, Universität der Bundeswehr: "Aktuelle Bedrohungslage 'Cyberspace' und die (rechtlichen) Auswirkungen auf KRITIS-Unternehmen" - Thomas Dorstewitz, enercity: "Löschen von personenbezogenen Daten; aber wie? Entwicklung eines generischen Löschkonzeptes auf Grundlage der DIN 66398" - Dr. Jens Gampe, BAFIN: "Aktuelles zum IT-Recht im Finanzsektor" - Dr. Timo Hauschild, BSI: "Zur Konkretisierung des Standes der Technik bei KRITIS - Ein Wechselspiel zwischen BSI und Betreibern" - RA Karsten U. Bartels, LL.M., HK2 / TeleTrusT: "ITSiG-Tango: Wie sich das Verhältnis von KRITIS-Betreibern, Zulieferern, Herstellern und Aufsicht nach dem IT-Sicherheitsgesetz 2.0 ändert" - RA Detlef Klett, Taylor Wessing: "Gesetzesvielfalt: Wie wappnet sich der Gesetzgeber gegen Cyber-Kriminelle?" - Alisha Gühr, LL.M., datenschutz cert: "Zertifizierungen gemäß Art. 42 DSGVO aus Sicht einer Zertifizierungsstelle" - Moderation: Dr. Jana Moser     Passende Artikel zum Thema Lesen Sie den ganzen Artikel
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skgt24 · 4 years
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CONVERSATIONS WITH THE EMPEROR This project challenges the omnipre­sent romantizised sell-out of the im­pe­rial Sisi/Franzl myth. When you are in Bad Ischl, you cannot escape its imperial past. Even cleaning compa­nies use the emperor for marketing reasons. And each year, for a whole week in August, Bad Ischl celebrates Franz Joseph‘s birthday which is a magnet for thousands of watchers and even some die-hard monarchists wishing for the good old times. Each month throughout 2024, we host a Conversation with the Emperor sta­ged in Bad Ischl in former Habsburg buildings. International experts help us shed light on our imperial past and European connections from different angles. We start the project with a public debate on reasons why the Habsburgs even came to the SKGT. Historian Michael Kurz offers his expertise on this topic. Another Conversation deals with the manifold European connections the imperial family held, making Bad Ischl not only a site of high ranking diplo­macy but also the place where the de­claration of WWI was signed. For this Conversation, we invite specialists from cities and regions with which we share a Habsburgian past. We are in contact with Novi Sad, Banja Luka, Veszprem and Bad Ischl‘s twin cities Gödöllö, Opatija and Sarajevo. Another Conversation is about the Sisi-cult which was inspired by Romy Schneider movies. With Karin Moser (AT), a University of Vienna historian, we also take a closer look at other films that helped to shape the Emperor‘s image since the 1930s. Sons of Sissy by Simon Mayer (AT) is a perfor­mance of ri­tuals, dances and traditio­nal alpine music freed from conser­vatism and conventions. Hannes Leidinger (AT), director of the Lud­wig Boltzmann Institute for Re­search on consequences of wars in Vienna, deals with WWI, which was started by the signing of the decla­ration of war in the Kaiservilla in Bad Ischl. Pieter Judson (NL/IT), from the European Uni­versity Institute in Florence, shares his expertise on the life of ordinary people during the Habsburgian Empire while Graham Boxer, from the Imperial War Museum (UK) gives insight on ways of commemorating imperial histories. We hope to welcome Glaswegian indie-rock band Franz Ferdinand to play a concert for us, allowing for a comple­te­ly different Habsburgian connection. Other Conversations present the original, “famous” Sommerfrische, its royalty and entourage of artists, but also its effects on local citizens. In contrast, the seldom talked about Sommerfrische following WWII still returns the children of those Som­merfrischler, now adults, to our region. One Conversation tells their personal stories. Balkan Routes, a project by Hans Fuchs (AT) is also integrated into Conver­sations with the Emperor. Timişoara Thrust was an organized relocation during the Habsburg monarchy. In the 1750s a total of 3,130 people were deported from the SKGT to Timişoara. Now, in the present time, teenagers from both regions explore and docu­ment traces of the forced migration. The results of this journey are presen­ted within one Conversation, alongside Annemarie Steidl’s (Uni­versity of Vien­na, AT) expertise on migration and work during the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Partners: Graham Boxer (UK), Hans Fuchs (AT), Pieter Judson (IT), Michael Kurz (AT), Hannes Leidinger (AT), Simon Mayer (AT), Verena Metzenrath (AT), Johannes Mittendorfer (AT), Karin Moser (AT), Annemarie Steidl (AT), Veszprem 2023 (HU), Novi Sad 2021 (RS), Gödöllö (HU), Opatija (HR), Sarajevo (BA) Estimated Budget: € 200.000.- When: 2024 Duration: 12 Conversations in total, one per month Where: Bad Ischl
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miriadonline · 7 years
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CONF: Association of Art Historians PhD Summer Symposium, Glasgow, 6th - 7th July
AAH Summer Symposium 2017 Re/Presenting the Body: Between Art and Science University of Glasgow 6-7 July 2017 Gilmorehill Concert Hall & Kelvin Hall Lecture Theatre
Conference Programme 
Day 1: Thursday, 6 July 2017 (University of Glasgow – Gilmorehill Concert Hall)
11:00-11:30 Registration 11:30-11:45 Welcome 11:45-13:15 Session 1: The ‘Deformed Body’
13.15-14:.45 Lunch
14.45-15.45 Session 2: The Medical Body
Bec Dean (University of New South Wales, AU): The Patient: Biomedical Art and Curatorial Fiona Davies (SCA, University of Sydney, AU): A Medical Monitor’s Song
15.00-15.45 Refreshments
15.45-17:00 Tour of The Hunterian Museums
17.30-18.30 Keynote (Kelvin Hall Lecture Theatre)
Dr Suzannah Biernoff (Birkbeck, University of London, UK): Approaching disfigurement. Towards a cultural anatomy of the face
19.30 Speakers Dinner
Day 2: Friday, 7 July 2017 (Kelvin Hall Lecture Theatre, Kelvin Hall, 1445 Argyle St, Glasgow)
10.00-10:30 Registration and Refreshments 10.30-11.30 Session 3: The Subversive Body
Tarquin Sinan (Université Libre de Bruxelles, BE): Perception of the Human Figure. Analysis of the body as a universal visual stimulus in art through the work of Antony Gormley Jacquie Chlanda (University of Queensland, AU): The In Utero Encounter. Janine Antoni’s Maternal
11.30-13.00 Lunch 14.00-15.00 Session 4: The Medieval Body
Carly Boxer (University of Chicago, USA): Bodily Parts: Medical Diagrams and Mechanical Bodies in Al-Jazari’s Book of Knowledge of Ingenious Mechanical Devices
Lauren Rozenberg (University College London, UK): ‘I am a brain, Watson. The rest of me is a mere appendix’: Guido da Vigevano’s fourteenth-century neuroanatomical plates and the fragmentation of the body
15.00-15.45 Refreshments 15.45-16:45 Session 5: The Affected Body
Ilaria Grando (University of York, UK): Chronicles from the AIDS crisis Isa Fontbona Mola (Universitat de Girona, ES): Showing a female bodybuilding body
17.30-18.30 Keynote
Dr Lianne McTavish (University of Alberta, CA): Tapeworms As/In Body in Early Modern History
18.30- 20:00 Closing reception
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Mega-Regional Trade Agreements: CETA, TTIP, and TiSA
Mega-Regional Trade Agreements: CETA, TTIP, and TiSA
Author: Edited by Stefan Griller, Walter Obwexer, and Erich Vranes ISBN: 9780198808893 Binding: Hardcover Publication Date: 01 November 2017 Price: $95.00
The Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement between the EU and Canada (CETA), proposed Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership between the EU and the US (TTIP), and the plurilateral Trade in Services Agreement (TiSA) between the EU and 22 other States have sparked a great deal of academic and public interest.
This edited collection brings together leading experts in the field of international economic law to address the legal complexities of these treaties and provide an explanation of their core principles. In the first two chapters, this book examines changing conceptions of international economic law and the main motivations for negotiating mega-regional agreements. In nine further contributions, international experts examine sectoral issues such as the trade, investment, and dispute settlement procedures envisaged in these ‘mega-regional’ agreements. The book goes on to consider the progress made in intellectual property protection, the problems associated with data protection, human rights, labour, and environmental standards, issues of transparency and legitimacy, and the relationship between CETA, TTIP, and TiSA on the one hand and EU law on the other. It concludes with four chapters that discuss globalization and other fundamental questions surrounding these mega-regional agreements from economic, political science, and legal perspectives.
Table of Contents
Part I: Fundamental and Introductory Issues 1. Mega-Regional Agreements: New Orientations for EU External Relations?, Stefan Griller, Walter Obwexer, Erich Vranes 2. CETA, TTIP, and TiSA: New Trends in International Economic Law, Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann Part II: Selected Sectoral Issues 3. The Contents of CETA, TTIP, and TiSA: The (Envisaged) Trade Disciplines, Erich Vranes 4. The Reform of Investment Protection Rules in CETA, TTIP, and other Recent EU-FTAs: Convincing?, Christian Tietje and Kevin Crow 5. Authority, Legitimacy, and Fragmentation in the (Envisaged) Dispute Settlement Disciplines in Mega-Regionals, Stephan Schill 6. Intellectual Property and Mega-Regional Agreements: Progress and Opportunities Missed, Thomas Cottier 7. CETA, TTIP, TiSA, and Data Protection, Walter Berka 8. CETA, TTIP, TiSA, and Financial Services, Christoph Ohler 9. Human Rights, Labour Standards, and Environmental Standards in CETA, Lorand Bartels 10. TTIP, CETA, TiSA Behind Closed Doors: Transparency in the EU Trade Policy, Panos Delimatsis 11. CETA, TTIP, TiSA, and their Relationship with EU Law, Stefan Mayr Part III: CETA, TTIP, and TiSA: New Challenges for Politics, Law, and Legitimacy? 12. On the Expected Economic Effects of Trade Liberalisation and the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP), Christoph Moser 13. The Struggle for and against Globalisation: International Trade Agreements and the Democratic Question, Sonja Puntscher Riekmann 14. Three Salient Issues of the New Comprehensive Free Trade Agreements, Stefan Griller 15. A New Generation of Trade Agreements: An Opportunity not to be Missed?, Verena Madner 16. Conclusions, Stefan Griller, Walter Obwexer, Erich Vranes
Stefan Griller, Professor of European Law, University of Salzburg,Walter Obwexer, Director, Institute of European Law and International Law, University of Innsbruck,Erich Vranes, Professor of European and International Economic Law, Vienna University of Economics and Business
Stefan Griller was appointed Professor for Public Law with special regard to European Law at the Vienna University of Economics and Business in 1991. Since 2008 he has been President of ECSA Austria. At the University of Salzburg, he has been Vice President of the Salzburg Centre of European Union Studies – SCEUS since 2011, and since 2013 holds the chair for EU Law at the University of Salzburg.
Walter Obwexer was appointed full professor for EU Law, Public International Law, and International Relations at the University of Innsbruck in 2012. Apart from his university functions, since the 1990s Walter Obwexer has served as a legal counsel of government institutions in Austria.
Erich Vranes is professor of international law, European law, public law and international economic law at the Vienna University of Economics and Business (WU Wien). His research focuses on international economic law, fundamental issues of international law, European Law, EU external economic relations, and legal theory. Erich Vranes has studied law at the Universities of Graz, Lausanne, and Geneva.
Contributors:
Stefan Griller, Walter Obwexer, Erich Vranes Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann Erich Vranes Christian Tietje and Kevin Crow Stephan Schill Thomas Cottier Walter Berka Christoph Ohler Lorand Bartels Panos Delimatsis Stefan Mayr Christoph Moser Sonja Puntscher Riekmann Stefan Griller Verena Madner Stefan Griller, Walter Obwexer, Erich Vranes
[via International Law]
https://www.dipublico.org/107898/mega-regional-trade-agreements-ceta-ttip-and-tisa/
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sifongraphisme · 9 years
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Logo & Context
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miriadonline · 7 years
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CONF: Re/presenting the Body (Glasgow, 6-7 Jul 17)
Gilmorehill Concert Hall & Kelvin Hall Lecture Theatre, University of Glasgow, July 6 – 07, 2017
AAH Summer Symposium 2017 Re/Presenting the Body: Between Art and Science
Keynotes: Dr Lianne McTavish (University of Alberta, CA) and Dr Suzannah Biernoff (Birkbeck, University of London, UK)
PROGRAMME
Day 1: Thursday, 6 July 2017 (University of Glasgow – Gilmorehill Concert Hall)
11:00-11:30 Registration 11:30-11:45 Welcome
11:45-13:15 Session 1: The Deformed Body Hannah Halliwell (University of Birmingham, UK): The Body of the Fin-de-Siècle Morphine Addict
Verena Suchy (Justus-Liebig-University, DE): Grotesque Bodies: The Representation of Disability and Deformation in Early Modern Pearl-Figurines
Thomas Moser (Ludwig-Maximillian¹s University of Munich, DE): Mutual Sensuality: Considerations on the body in art and science during the Fin de Siècle
13.15-14:.45 Lunch
14.45-15.45 Session 2: The Medical Body
Bec Dean (University of New South Wales, AU): The Patient: Biomedical Art and Curatorial
Fiona Davies (SCA, University of Sydney, AU): A Medical Monitor’s Song
15.00-15.45 Refreshments
15.45-17:00 Tour of The Hunterian Museums
17.30-18.30 Keynote (Kelvin Hall Lecture Theatre) Dr Suzannah Biernoff (Birkbeck, University of London, UK): Approaching disfigurement. Towards a cultural anatomy of the face
19.30 Speakers Dinner
Day 2: Friday, 7 July 2017 (Kelvin Hall Lecture Theatre, Kelvin Hall, 1445 Argyle St, Glasgow)
10.00-10:30 Registration and Refreshments
10.30-11.30 Session 3: The Subversive Body
Tarquin Sinan (Université Libre de Bruxelles, BE): Perception of the Human Figure. Analysis of the body as a universal visual stimulus in art through the work of Antony Gormley
Jacquie Chlanda (University of Queensland, AU): The In Utero Encounter. Janine Antoni’s Maternal
11.30-13.00 Lunch
14.00-15.00 Session 4: The Medieval Body Carly Boxer (University of Chicago, USA): Bodily Parts: Medical Diagrams and Mechanical Bodies in Al-Jazari’s Book of Knowledge of Ingenious Mechanical Devices
Lauren Rozenberg (University College London, UK): ‘I am a brain, Watson. The rest of me is a mere appendix’: Guido da Vigevano¹s fourteenth-century neuroanatomical plates and the fragmentation of the body
15.00-15.45 Refreshments
15.45-16:45 Session 5: The Affected Body Ilaria Grando (University of York, UK): Chronicles from the AIDS crisis
Isa Fontbona Mola (Universitat de Girona, ES): Showing a female bodybuilding body
17.30-18.30 Keynote
Dr Lianne McTavish (University of Alberta, CA): Tapeworms As/In Body in Early Modern History
18.30- 20:00 Closing reception
Lunch and refreshments are provided and there will be a closing reception after the final keynote. Tickets are £19 for members and £28 regular delegate. Bookings at: http://www.aah.org.uk/events/summer-symposium
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