Law and the Technologies of the Twenty-First Century: Text and Materials (Law in Context)
Cambridge University Press, 6/14/2012
EAN 9781107006553, ISBN10: 1107006554
Hardcover, 492 pages, 24.7 x 17.4 x 2.6 cm
Language: English
Law and the Technologies of the Twenty-First Century provides a contextual account of the way in which law functions in a broader regulatory environment across different jurisdictions. It identifies and clearly structures the four key challenges that technology poses to regulatory efforts, distinguishing between technology as a regulatory target and tool, and guiding the reader through an emerging field that is subject to rapid change. By extensive use of examples and extracts from the texts and materials that form and shape the scholarly and public debates over technology regulation, it presents complex material in a stimulating and engaging manner. Co-authored by a leading scholar in the field with a scholar new to the area, it combines comprehensive knowledge of the field with a fresh approach. This is essential reading for students of law and technology, risk regulation, policy studies, and science and technology studies.
Part I. General Introduction
1. Law and the technologies of the twenty-first century
2. The regulatory environment
UK Biobank, eBay, and Wikipedia
3. Four key regulatory challenges
4. Technology as a regulatory tool
DNA profiling and Marper
Part II. Regulatory Prudence and Precaution
5. Regulatory prudence I
health, safety and environment, GM crops, nanoparticles, and sound science
6. Regulatory prudence II
precaution
Part III. Regulatory Legitimacy
7. The legitimacy of the regulatory environment – the basic ideas
8. Key boundary-marking concepts
9. Human rights as boundary-markers
10. Understanding procedural legitimacy – the role of public participation in technology regulation
Part IV. Regulatory Effectiveness
11. Regulatory effectiveness I
12. Regulatory effectiveness II
failure by regulators
13. Regulatory effectiveness III
resistance by regulatees
14. Regulatory effectiveness IV
third-party interference and disruptive externalities
Part V. Regulatory Connection
15. Regulatory connection I
getting connected
16. Regulatory connection II
disconnection and sustainability
Part VI. Concluding Overview
17. From law to code
the surveillance society and Marper revisited.