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From the 24th to the 26th of May, 2016, the seventh scientific-expert meeting with the international participation “European Integration: Justice, Freedom and Security” was held at Tara. The gathering was organized by the Criminalistics-Police Academy (CPA), the Hans Zajdel Foundation and the Ministry of the Interior of the Republic of Serbia. At the opening of the conference, prof. Dr. Milan Žarković, ed. Vice-Dean for the CPA teaching, Mr. Bogoljub Zivkovic, Assistant Director of the Police of the Republic of Serbia, Mr. Luc Kober, Project Manager of the Foundation Foundation “Hans Zajdel” for Serbia and Montenegro, prof. Dr. Dragana Kolarić, ed. CPA dean, Katarina Tomasevic, et. Assistant Minister, Head of the Human Resources Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Republic of Serbia,
A large number of papers from eminent experts in the field of legal, criminal, security and police theory and practices from ten countries – Russia, Belgium, Romania, Hungary, Slovenia, Croatia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Macedonia and Serbia – were presented at the event.Participation at this meeting was also taken by Doc. dr. Aleksandar R. Ivanovic, the president of the association “Monitor”, and Ms. Samra Dečkovic, member of the “Monitor” association, who exposed the co-author’s work entitled “Right to be forgotten as the fundamental principle of protecting personal data in the digital era”. In their work, they addressed the issue of “Right to be Forgotten” from the aspect of the decisions of the European Court of Justice and European regulations in the field of personal data protection. The work was aimed at presenting the basic postulates of “the right to be forgotten” to the scientific and public lay in the light of European standards on the protection of personal rights and freedoms. This paper deals with the emergence of this right as well as the process of its realization in relation to the current European legislation. Special attention was paid to the issue of the possibility of exercising this right, because according to the decision of the European Court of Justice, this is not an absolute right, but a right that has certain limitations and which can only be achieved upon request and when certain conditions are fulfilled.