Artificial Intelligence and International Economic Law
Herausgeber: Lin, Ching-Fu; Streinz, Thomas; Peng, Shin-Yi
Artificial Intelligence and International Economic Law
Herausgeber: Lin, Ching-Fu; Streinz, Thomas; Peng, Shin-Yi
- Gebundenes Buch
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Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 366
- Erscheinungstermin: 17. September 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 24mm
- Gewicht: 682g
- ISBN-13: 9781108844932
- ISBN-10: 1108844936
- Artikelnr.: 61402026
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Preface; 1. Artificial intelligence and international economic law:
disruption, regulation, and reconfiguration Shin-Yi Peng, Ching-Fu Lin and
Thomas Streinz; Part I. Systemic Shifts in the Global Economic Order: 2.
Trade law in a data-driven economy: a call for modesty and resilience
Gregory Shaffer; 3. Global law in the face of datafication and artificial
intelligence Rolf H. Weber; 4. Trading AI: economic interests, societal
choices and multilateral rules Dan Ciuriak and Vlada Rodionova; Part II.
Reconceptualizing WTO Law for the Ai Economy: 5. Trade rules for industry
4.0: why the TBT agreement matters even more Aik Hoe Lim; 6. Autonomous
vehicle standards under the TBT agreement: disrupting the boundaries?
Shin-Yi Peng; 7. Convergence, complexity and uncertainty: AI and
intellectual property protection Bryan Mercurio and Ronald Yu; 8. Are
digital trade disputes 'trade disputes'? Yuka Fukunaga; Part III. Data
Regulation as AI Regulation: 9. International economic law's regulation of
data as a resource for the AI economy Thomas Streinz; 10. Data protection
and artificial intelligence: the EU's internal approach and its promotion
through trade agreements Alan Hervé; 11. Data portability in a data-driven
world Frederike Zufall and Raphael Zingg; Part IV. International Economic
Law Limits to AI Regulation: 12. Public moral, trade secret, and the
dilemma of regulating driving automation systems Ching-Fu Lin; 13.
International trade law and the data ethics: possibilities and challenges
Neha Mishra; 14. Disciplining artificial intelligence policies: WTO law as
a sword and a shield Kelly K. Shang and Rachel R. Du; V. Reconfiguration of
International Economic Law: 15. Across the great wall: e-commerce joint
statement initiative negotiation and China Henry Gao; 16. The next great
global knowledge infrastructure land rush has begun: will the US or China
prevail? Jane K. Winn and Yi-Shyuan Chiang; 17. Trade law architecture
after the fourth industrial revolution Lisa Toohey.
disruption, regulation, and reconfiguration Shin-Yi Peng, Ching-Fu Lin and
Thomas Streinz; Part I. Systemic Shifts in the Global Economic Order: 2.
Trade law in a data-driven economy: a call for modesty and resilience
Gregory Shaffer; 3. Global law in the face of datafication and artificial
intelligence Rolf H. Weber; 4. Trading AI: economic interests, societal
choices and multilateral rules Dan Ciuriak and Vlada Rodionova; Part II.
Reconceptualizing WTO Law for the Ai Economy: 5. Trade rules for industry
4.0: why the TBT agreement matters even more Aik Hoe Lim; 6. Autonomous
vehicle standards under the TBT agreement: disrupting the boundaries?
Shin-Yi Peng; 7. Convergence, complexity and uncertainty: AI and
intellectual property protection Bryan Mercurio and Ronald Yu; 8. Are
digital trade disputes 'trade disputes'? Yuka Fukunaga; Part III. Data
Regulation as AI Regulation: 9. International economic law's regulation of
data as a resource for the AI economy Thomas Streinz; 10. Data protection
and artificial intelligence: the EU's internal approach and its promotion
through trade agreements Alan Hervé; 11. Data portability in a data-driven
world Frederike Zufall and Raphael Zingg; Part IV. International Economic
Law Limits to AI Regulation: 12. Public moral, trade secret, and the
dilemma of regulating driving automation systems Ching-Fu Lin; 13.
International trade law and the data ethics: possibilities and challenges
Neha Mishra; 14. Disciplining artificial intelligence policies: WTO law as
a sword and a shield Kelly K. Shang and Rachel R. Du; V. Reconfiguration of
International Economic Law: 15. Across the great wall: e-commerce joint
statement initiative negotiation and China Henry Gao; 16. The next great
global knowledge infrastructure land rush has begun: will the US or China
prevail? Jane K. Winn and Yi-Shyuan Chiang; 17. Trade law architecture
after the fourth industrial revolution Lisa Toohey.
Preface; 1. Artificial intelligence and international economic law:
disruption, regulation, and reconfiguration Shin-Yi Peng, Ching-Fu Lin and
Thomas Streinz; Part I. Systemic Shifts in the Global Economic Order: 2.
Trade law in a data-driven economy: a call for modesty and resilience
Gregory Shaffer; 3. Global law in the face of datafication and artificial
intelligence Rolf H. Weber; 4. Trading AI: economic interests, societal
choices and multilateral rules Dan Ciuriak and Vlada Rodionova; Part II.
Reconceptualizing WTO Law for the Ai Economy: 5. Trade rules for industry
4.0: why the TBT agreement matters even more Aik Hoe Lim; 6. Autonomous
vehicle standards under the TBT agreement: disrupting the boundaries?
Shin-Yi Peng; 7. Convergence, complexity and uncertainty: AI and
intellectual property protection Bryan Mercurio and Ronald Yu; 8. Are
digital trade disputes 'trade disputes'? Yuka Fukunaga; Part III. Data
Regulation as AI Regulation: 9. International economic law's regulation of
data as a resource for the AI economy Thomas Streinz; 10. Data protection
and artificial intelligence: the EU's internal approach and its promotion
through trade agreements Alan Hervé; 11. Data portability in a data-driven
world Frederike Zufall and Raphael Zingg; Part IV. International Economic
Law Limits to AI Regulation: 12. Public moral, trade secret, and the
dilemma of regulating driving automation systems Ching-Fu Lin; 13.
International trade law and the data ethics: possibilities and challenges
Neha Mishra; 14. Disciplining artificial intelligence policies: WTO law as
a sword and a shield Kelly K. Shang and Rachel R. Du; V. Reconfiguration of
International Economic Law: 15. Across the great wall: e-commerce joint
statement initiative negotiation and China Henry Gao; 16. The next great
global knowledge infrastructure land rush has begun: will the US or China
prevail? Jane K. Winn and Yi-Shyuan Chiang; 17. Trade law architecture
after the fourth industrial revolution Lisa Toohey.
disruption, regulation, and reconfiguration Shin-Yi Peng, Ching-Fu Lin and
Thomas Streinz; Part I. Systemic Shifts in the Global Economic Order: 2.
Trade law in a data-driven economy: a call for modesty and resilience
Gregory Shaffer; 3. Global law in the face of datafication and artificial
intelligence Rolf H. Weber; 4. Trading AI: economic interests, societal
choices and multilateral rules Dan Ciuriak and Vlada Rodionova; Part II.
Reconceptualizing WTO Law for the Ai Economy: 5. Trade rules for industry
4.0: why the TBT agreement matters even more Aik Hoe Lim; 6. Autonomous
vehicle standards under the TBT agreement: disrupting the boundaries?
Shin-Yi Peng; 7. Convergence, complexity and uncertainty: AI and
intellectual property protection Bryan Mercurio and Ronald Yu; 8. Are
digital trade disputes 'trade disputes'? Yuka Fukunaga; Part III. Data
Regulation as AI Regulation: 9. International economic law's regulation of
data as a resource for the AI economy Thomas Streinz; 10. Data protection
and artificial intelligence: the EU's internal approach and its promotion
through trade agreements Alan Hervé; 11. Data portability in a data-driven
world Frederike Zufall and Raphael Zingg; Part IV. International Economic
Law Limits to AI Regulation: 12. Public moral, trade secret, and the
dilemma of regulating driving automation systems Ching-Fu Lin; 13.
International trade law and the data ethics: possibilities and challenges
Neha Mishra; 14. Disciplining artificial intelligence policies: WTO law as
a sword and a shield Kelly K. Shang and Rachel R. Du; V. Reconfiguration of
International Economic Law: 15. Across the great wall: e-commerce joint
statement initiative negotiation and China Henry Gao; 16. The next great
global knowledge infrastructure land rush has begun: will the US or China
prevail? Jane K. Winn and Yi-Shyuan Chiang; 17. Trade law architecture
after the fourth industrial revolution Lisa Toohey.