![]() ![]() ![]() Individual derogations from the General Data Protection Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/679) ('GDPR'), which are left to the Member States to regulate, have not yet been imposed by the Slovenian legislator. Although amended several times, the Act still represents the Slovenian national legislation on personal data protection. However, the first comprehensive data protection law was the Law on Personal Data Protection, as adopted on 7 March 1990, both still in the Socialist Federative Republic of Yugoslavia.Īfter the independence of the Republic of Slovenia, the legal regulation of personal data protection was renewed by the Personal Data Protection Act 1999, and Data Protection Directive (Directive 95/46/EC) ('the Directive') was later transposed with the Personal Data Protection Act 2004 ('the Act'). The first attempt to regulate the protection of personal data by law can be seen in the Social Information System Act 1983. The special feature of constitutional decrees is the requirement that the collection, processing, purpose, control, and protection of the secrecy of personal data be determined by law (and not by an executive regulation). Personal data protection is a constitutional and human right, stipulated in Article 38 of the Constitution of the Republic of Slovenia. ![]() Slovenia has long tradition in data protection regulation. Please note that the Personal Data Protection Act 2004 has been repealed by the Personal Data Protection Act 2022 (only available in Slovenian here) ('ZVOP-2'), which entered into force on 26 January 2023. ![]()
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