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A clear and comprehensive introduction for students studying key regulatory challenges posed by technologies in the twenty-first century.
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A clear and comprehensive introduction for students studying key regulatory challenges posed by technologies in the twenty-first century.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 492
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Juni 2012
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 250mm x 175mm x 31mm
- Gewicht: 1020g
- ISBN-13: 9781107006553
- ISBN-10: 1107006554
- Artikelnr.: 35113062
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 492
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Juni 2012
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 250mm x 175mm x 31mm
- Gewicht: 1020g
- ISBN-13: 9781107006553
- ISBN-10: 1107006554
- Artikelnr.: 35113062
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
Roger Brownsword is Professor of Law at King's College London. He has been teaching in university law schools since 1968 and currently teaches 'Law and the Technologies of the Twenty-First Century' to students at both King's College London and Singapore Management University. He is a co-founding editor of the journal Law, Innovation and Technology and a member of the editorial board of the Modern Law Review. He has published extensively in the fields of contracts and the common law, legal theory, bioethics and the regulation of technology.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.