Setting the stage : why 'reading' brains raises fundamental legal questions for European human rights law -- Brain-reading technologies : their legally relevant features -- Coercive brain-reading and the prohibition of ill-treatment -- Coercive brain-reading and the right to respect for private life -- Coercive brain-reading and the rights to freedom of thought and to freedom of expression -- Coercive brain-reading and the privilege against self-incrimination -- Procedural implications of brain-reading in breach of the ECHR : excluding unlawfully obtained evidence? -- Discussion and perspectives : emerging challenges for European human rights law -- Concluding observations
Summary
This book examines the legal boundaries of non-consensual brain-reading in criminal justice, focusing on human rights like freedom of thought
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 267-288) and index