ISO 27001 and Parliamentary supremacy: Difference between pages

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''Information technology - standards - ISO.''
''UK law''.
The historical principle in UK law that the UK Parliament was 'supreme' in its law-making powers.
This principle was fundamentally affected when the UK joined the EU in 1973.


The ISO/IEC 27000 family of standards helps organisations keep information secure.
Parliamentary supremacy meant that:


Using this family of ISO standards can help the organisation manage the security of assets such as financial information, intellectual property, employee details or information entrusted to it by third parties.
1) The UK Parliament was able to make UK law as it saw fit either by repealing earlier statutes, over-ruling case law or by making new law.  


ISO/IEC 27001 is the best-known standard in the family providing requirements for an information security management system (ISMS).
2) No UK Parliament could bind its successor.  Parliament could not make laws that a subsequent Parliament was prevented from altering or repealing.
 
3) The UK courts had to apply the relevant statute law enacted by the UK Parliament.
By joining the EU, UK Parliamentary supremacy was fundamentally affected and it is no longer true to say that only the UK Parliament has the power to make new law for the UK. 
The effect of becoming a member of the EU was to cede the UK Parliament's supremacy on certain matters of European Union law which have direct effect on member states. 
 
The position now is that: 
 
1) The EU may pass legislation directly for the UK.
 
2) The UK cannot, generally, make laws that conflict with EU law.
 
3) Overall, EU law enjoys supremacy over domestic national law and is applied in priority to domestic law.




== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Information security management system]]
* [[European Union ]]
* [[ISO]]
* [[Sovereignty]]
* [[Risk management]]
* [[Security]]


[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
[[Category:Technology]]

Revision as of 14:20, 23 October 2012

UK law. The historical principle in UK law that the UK Parliament was 'supreme' in its law-making powers. This principle was fundamentally affected when the UK joined the EU in 1973.

Parliamentary supremacy meant that:

1) The UK Parliament was able to make UK law as it saw fit either by repealing earlier statutes, over-ruling case law or by making new law.

2) No UK Parliament could bind its successor. Parliament could not make laws that a subsequent Parliament was prevented from altering or repealing.

3) The UK courts had to apply the relevant statute law enacted by the UK Parliament.

By joining the EU, UK Parliamentary supremacy was fundamentally affected and it is no longer true to say that only the UK Parliament has the power to make new law for the UK. The effect of becoming a member of the EU was to cede the UK Parliament's supremacy on certain matters of European Union law which have direct effect on member states.

The position now is that:

1) The EU may pass legislation directly for the UK.

2) The UK cannot, generally, make laws that conflict with EU law.

3) Overall, EU law enjoys supremacy over domestic national law and is applied in priority to domestic law.


See also