Journal of Research and Development in Comparative Law

Journal of Research and Development in Comparative Law

Brain Reading Technologies and the Violation of Mental Privacy: A Comparative Study of Legal Protections in Iran and the European Convention on Human Rights

Document Type : scientific research paper

Authors
1 PhD student in Criminal Law and Criminology at Qom University -Judge
2 Department of Criminal Law and Criminology, Faculty of Law, University of Qom, Qom, Iran
Abstract
One of the emerging issues at the intersection of neuroscience and criminal law is the use of brain-reading technologies to discover the truth, detect lies, assess criminal responsibility, or predict the risk of recidivism. These technologies, which have so far been used to a limited extent and primarily with individual consent in judicial proceedings in some European countries such as Italy, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom, raise a fundamental question: Does compulsory and non-consensual use of such tools conflict with fundamental human rights, including the right to mental privacy?
In Western legal systems, some ethicists and jurists, to counter these threats, have proposed recognizing a new right termed "mental privacy." However, more cautious viewpoints suggest that this domain can be interpreted and developed within the framework of existing rights, such as the right to privacy, human dignity, and the right to silence, negating the need for creating a separate and independent right.
This article, which adopts an analytical-descriptive method and focuses on the Iranian legal system while also studying the European Convention on Human Rights, seeks to determine whether the existing legal structure – particularly the principles of the Constitution, Criminal Procedure Laws, and legal foundations – possesses the necessary capacity to protect mental privacy and counter the improper applications of neuroimaging technologies. In case legal gaps are identified, it examines what legislative or interpretive approaches should be adopted.
The findings of the research indicate that although existing law in Iran can to some extent protect freedom of thought, the right to silence, and human dignity, these protections are insufficient to address the unique challenges posed by neural data. Therefore, the compulsory use of brain-reading technologies could be considered an instance of probing into thoughts and a violation of mental privacy. Consequently, the explicit recognition and legislation of the "right to mental privacy" in the Iranian legal system, inspired by the experience of countries such as Chile and France, is deemed necessary.
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Articles in Press, Accepted Manuscript
Available Online from 22 November 2025