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New data regulations in China: the impact on whistleblowing

Explore China’s new data transfer regulations and potential effects on your whistleblowing program in our latest webinar with partner Baker McKenzie. New regulations mean the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) is conducting security assessments on certain enterprises currently processing, handling or transferring personal information outside the country.

This webinar will provide you with an overview of the new regulations and the implications this has for how you manage whistleblowing within your organization.

New data regulations in China: the impact on whistleblowing - Hosted by Baker McKenzie

40 minutes

What you’ll learn:

  • What the new data transfer regulations are
  • The potential impact on global whistleblowing
  • The implications for internal whistleblowing programs
  • Whistleblowing options for organizations affected by regulations

Presented by: Henry Chen & Takeshi Yoshida

 

New data regulations in China: the impact on whistleblowing - Hosted by NAVEX

30 minutes

What you’ll learn:

  • Why is Whistleblowing Important?
  • Where can Whistleblowing Go Wrong?
  • Whistleblowing Best Practices
  • Whistleblowing options for affected organisations
  • Whistleblowing Benchmarks
  • Whistleblowing Technology

Presented by: Jan Stappers

 

Meet Your Speakers

  • Jan Stappers

    Whistleblowing Specialist

    NAVEX

    Jan Stappers

    Whistleblowing Specialist

    NAVEX

    An expert in organizational whistleblowing management, Jan is engaged with the development of the new ISO 37002 Standard, is a frequent speaker on subjects related to whistleblowing, and has authored various articles on new legislation concerning whistleblower protection, anti-corruption and organizational whistleblowing best practices.

    Jan is an International Association of Privacy Professionals (IAPP) Certified Information Privacy Professional (CIPP/E). He holds a Postgraduate Diploma (PGDip) from King’s College London in the United Kingdom (EU Competition Law) and a Master’s Degree (LLM) from Leiden University in the Netherlands (European Law).

  • Henry Chen

    Partner

    Baker McKenzie FenXun

    Henry Chen

    Partner

    Baker McKenzie FenXun

    Henry Chen has over 15 years’ experience handling cross-border compliance matters. As a US and PRC-trained lawyer, he has advised many multinational corporations on compliance and risk management in a variety of areas, including anti-bribery and corruption, anti-money laundering, anti-unfair competition, customs, data breach and cybersecurity, employee misconduct, financial crime, fraud, ESG, whistleblower allegations and white-collar crime.

    Before joining the Firm, Henry was the Asia Pacific Director of Investigations at a Fortune 500 pharmaceutical company, leading its regional compliance investigations. He also worked as a compliance professional in Washington DC, Hong Kong and Beijing.

  • Takeshi Yoshida

    Dispute Resolution & Compliance & Investigations

    Baker McKenzie

    Takeshi Yoshida

    Dispute Resolution & Compliance & Investigations

    Baker McKenzie

    Takeshi Yoshida is a partner in Baker McKenzie’s Dispute Resolution and Compliance & Investigations groups in Tokyo. Takeshi focuses his practice on international and domestic dispute resolution, crisis management, investigation and compliance in connection with bribery, human rights violations and participation in cartels, among other issues. He was recognized as a “Next Generation Partner” in Japan’s dispute resolution field by Legal 500 (2021 and 2022 editions) and is also a member of the Tokyo Bar Association, the New York Bar Association, the Institute of Internal Auditors (IIA) as a CIA, and the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners (ACFE) as a CFE.