The Oxford Handbook of Law, Regulation and Technology
Herausgeber: Brownsword, Roger; Yeung, Karen; Scotford, Eloise
The Oxford Handbook of Law, Regulation and Technology
Herausgeber: Brownsword, Roger; Yeung, Karen; Scotford, Eloise
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The variety, pace, and power of technological innovations that have emerged in the 21st Century has been breathtaking. Examining the insights of leading scholars of law, technology, and regulation, this handbook underpins the legal, ethical, and social implications of rapid technological change and the growing body of scholarship that has followed.
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The variety, pace, and power of technological innovations that have emerged in the 21st Century has been breathtaking. Examining the insights of leading scholars of law, technology, and regulation, this handbook underpins the legal, ethical, and social implications of rapid technological change and the growing body of scholarship that has followed.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Oxford Handbooks
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 1216
- Erscheinungstermin: 20. September 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 251mm x 179mm x 68mm
- Gewicht: 1912g
- ISBN-13: 9780199680832
- ISBN-10: 0199680833
- Artikelnr.: 48743729
- Oxford Handbooks
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 1216
- Erscheinungstermin: 20. September 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 251mm x 179mm x 68mm
- Gewicht: 1912g
- ISBN-13: 9780199680832
- ISBN-10: 0199680833
- Artikelnr.: 48743729
Roger Brownsword holds professorial positions at King's College London and Bournemouth University, and he is Honorary Professor in Law at Sheffield University. Until his retirement in 2010, he was founding Director of TELOS, an inter-disciplinary research centre at King's College London that focuses on law, ethics, and technology. He has acted as an adviser to parliamentary committees dealing with stem cells, cloning, and hybrid embryos, he was a member of the Nuffield Council on Bioethics from 2004 - 2010, he served on the Royal Society Brain Waves' Working Party on neuroscience and the law, and he was chair of the Ethics and Governance Council of UK Biobank from 2011-2015. He has published some 20 books and more than 200 academic papers; he is on the editorial board of the Modern Law Review, the International Journal of Law and Information Technology, and the Journal of Law and the Biosciences; and he is the founding general editor of Law, Innovation and Technology. Eloise Scotford is a Professor of Environmental Law, University College London. She joined UCL in 2017 from The Dickson Poon School of Law at King's College London, where she started as a Lecturer in 2010, after a previous appointment as Career Development Fellow in Environmental Law in the Faculty of Law and Corpus Christi College, University of Oxford. Dr Scotford actively researches in the areas of climate change law and governance, waste regulation, air quality control, comparative environmental law and sustainable development. Dr Scotford is Associate Member of Landmark Chambers, a visiting lecturer in environmental law at Bocconi University in Milan, and Analysis Editor for the Journal of Environmental Law. She also represents the United Kingdom in the Avosetta Group of EU environmental law experts. Karen Yeung is a Professor of Law at King's College London and a Distinguished Visiting Fellow at Melbourne Law School. From 1996 until 2006 she was a University Lecturer in Law at Oxford University Faculty of Law and a Tutorial Fellow in Law at St Anne's College, University of Oxford. She has established an international reputation in two fields: as an academic pioneer in helping to establish the intellectual coherence and value of regulation studies (or 'regulatory governance' studies) as a field of scholarly inquiry and as a leading scholar concerned with critically examining the governance of, and governance through, new and emerging technologies. Her current research focuses on critically evaluating the nature, legal, democratic and ethical implications of artificial intelligence, Big Data driven predictive decision-making and advances in neuroscientific techniques across a wide range of policy domains including commerce, healthcare, legal services and the enforcement of law.
* Part I: Introduction by the Editors
* Law, Regulation, and Technology: the Field, Frame, and Focal
Questions
* Part II
* 1: Roger Brownsword: Law, Liberty, and Technology
* 2: Jeanne Snelling and John McMillan: Equality: Old Debates, New
Technologies
* 3: Tom Sorell and John Guelke: Liberal Democractic Regulation and
Technological Advance
* 4: Thomas Baldwin: Identity
* 5: Donna Dickenson: The Common Good
* 6: Stephen Morse: Law, Responsibility, and the Sciences of the
Brain/Mind
* 7: Marcus Duwell: Human Dignity and the Ethics and Regulation of
Technology
* 8: Morag Goodwin: Human Rights and Human Tissue: the Case of Sperm as
Property
* Part III
* 9: Gregory Mandel: Legal Evolution in Response to Technological
Change
* 10: Antonio Cordella and Francesca Contini: Law and Technology in
Civil Judicial Procedures
* 11: Uta Kohl: Conflict of Laws and the Internet
* 12: O. Carter Snead and Stephanie Maloney: Technology and the
American Constitution
* 13: Stephen Waddams: Contract Law and the Challenges of Computer
Technology
* 14: Lisa Claydon: Criminal Law and the Evolving Technological
Understanding of Behaviour
* 15: Elizabeth Fisher: Imagining Technology and Environment Law
* 16: Han Somsen: From Improvement towards Enhancement: A Regenesis of
Environmental Law at the Dawn of the Anthropocene
* 17: Jonathan Herring: Parental Responsibility: Hyper-parenting and
the Role of Technology
* 18: Giovanni Sartor: Human Rights and Information Technologies
* 19: Dinusha Mendis, Phoebe Li, Diane Nicol, and Jane Nielsen: The
Co-Existence of Copyright and Patent Laws to Protect Innovation: A
Case Study of 3D Printing in UK and Australian Law
* 20: Tonia Novitz: Regulating Workplace Technology: Extending the
Agenda
* 21: Rosemary Rayfuse: Public International Law and the Regulation of
Emerging Technologies
* 22: Jonathan Morgan: Torts and Technology
* 23: Arthur Cockfield: Tax Law and Technology Change
* Part IV
* Section A: Regulating New Technologies
* 24: Lyria Bennett-Moses: Regulating in the Face of Sociotechnical
Change
* 25: Meg Leta-Jones and Jason Millar: Hacking Metaphors in the
Anticipatory Governance of Emerging Technology: The Case of
Regulating Robots
* 26: Maria Lee: The Legal Institutionalization of Public Participation
in the EU Governance of Technology
* 27: Andrew Stirling: Precaution in the Governance of Technology
* 28: Andrew Murray and Mark Leiser: The Role of Non-state Actors and
Institutions in the Governance of New and Emerging Digital
Technologies
* Section B: Technology as Regulation
* 29: Amber Marks, Benjamin Bowling, and Colman Keenan: Automated
Justice?Technology, Crime, and Social Control
* 30: Tjerk Timan, Masa Galic, and Bert-Jaap Koops: Surveillance Theory
and Its Implications for Law
* 31: Lee. A. Bygrave: Hardwiring Privacy
* 32: Fleur Johns: Data Mining as Global Governance
* 33: Jesse L. Reynolds: Climate Engineering, Law, and Regulation
* 34: Karen Yeung: Are Biomedical Interventions Legitimate Regulatory
Instruments?
* 35: Nicholas Agar: Challenges from the Future of Human Enhancement
* 36: Robin Bradley Kar, John Lindo: Race and Law in the Genomic Age: A
Problem for Equal Treatment Under the Law
* Part V: Six Key Policy Spheres
* Section A: Medicine
* 37: John Harris, David Lawrence: New Technologies, Old Attitudes, and
Legislative Rigidity
* 38: Barbel Dorbeck-Jung: Transcending the Myth of Law's Stifling
Technological Innovation - How Adaptive Drug Licensing Processes are
Maintaining Legitimate Regulatory Connections
* Section B: Population, Reproduction, and Family
* 39: Therese Murphy: Human Rights in Technological Times
* 40: Sheila A. M. McLean: Population, Reproduction, and Family
* 41: Colin Gavaghan: Reproductive Technologies and the Search for
Regulatory Legitimacy: Fuzzy Lines, Decaying Consensus, and
Intractable Normative Problems
* Section C: Trade, Commerce, and Employment
* 42: Thomas Cottier: Technology and the Law of International Trade
Regulation
* 43: Kenneth G. Dau-Schmidt: Trade, Commerce, and Employment: The
Evolution of the Form and Regulation of the Employment Relationship
in Response to the New Information Technology
* Section D: Public Safety and Security
* 44: David S. Wall: Crime, Security, and Information Communication
Technologies: The Changing Cybersecurity Threat Landscape and
Implications for Regulation and Policing
* 45: Kenneth Anderson, Matthew C. Waxman: Debating Autonomous Weapon
Systems, Their Ethics, and Their Regulation Under International Law
* 46: Filippa Lentzos: Genetic Engineering and Biological Risks: Policy
Formation and Regulatory Response
* Section E: Communications, Information, Media, and Culture
* 47: Nora A Draper, Joseph Turow: Audience Constructions, Reputations,
and Emerging Media Technologies: New Issues of Legal and Social
Policy
* Section F: Energy, Environment, Food, and Water
* 48: Robin Kundis Craig: Water, Energy, and Technology: The Legal
Challenges of Interdependencies and Technological Limits
* 49: Victor B. Flatt: Technology Wags the Law: How Technological
Solutions Changed the Perception of Environmental Harm and Law
* 50: Robert Lee: Novel Foods and Risk Assessment in Europe: Separating
Science from Society
* 51: Richard Macrory: Carbon Capture and Storage
* 52: Benjamin Pontin: Nuisance Law, Regulation and the Invention of
Prototypical Pollution Abatement Technology: 'Voluntarism' in Common
Law and Regulation
* Law, Regulation, and Technology: the Field, Frame, and Focal
Questions
* Part II
* 1: Roger Brownsword: Law, Liberty, and Technology
* 2: Jeanne Snelling and John McMillan: Equality: Old Debates, New
Technologies
* 3: Tom Sorell and John Guelke: Liberal Democractic Regulation and
Technological Advance
* 4: Thomas Baldwin: Identity
* 5: Donna Dickenson: The Common Good
* 6: Stephen Morse: Law, Responsibility, and the Sciences of the
Brain/Mind
* 7: Marcus Duwell: Human Dignity and the Ethics and Regulation of
Technology
* 8: Morag Goodwin: Human Rights and Human Tissue: the Case of Sperm as
Property
* Part III
* 9: Gregory Mandel: Legal Evolution in Response to Technological
Change
* 10: Antonio Cordella and Francesca Contini: Law and Technology in
Civil Judicial Procedures
* 11: Uta Kohl: Conflict of Laws and the Internet
* 12: O. Carter Snead and Stephanie Maloney: Technology and the
American Constitution
* 13: Stephen Waddams: Contract Law and the Challenges of Computer
Technology
* 14: Lisa Claydon: Criminal Law and the Evolving Technological
Understanding of Behaviour
* 15: Elizabeth Fisher: Imagining Technology and Environment Law
* 16: Han Somsen: From Improvement towards Enhancement: A Regenesis of
Environmental Law at the Dawn of the Anthropocene
* 17: Jonathan Herring: Parental Responsibility: Hyper-parenting and
the Role of Technology
* 18: Giovanni Sartor: Human Rights and Information Technologies
* 19: Dinusha Mendis, Phoebe Li, Diane Nicol, and Jane Nielsen: The
Co-Existence of Copyright and Patent Laws to Protect Innovation: A
Case Study of 3D Printing in UK and Australian Law
* 20: Tonia Novitz: Regulating Workplace Technology: Extending the
Agenda
* 21: Rosemary Rayfuse: Public International Law and the Regulation of
Emerging Technologies
* 22: Jonathan Morgan: Torts and Technology
* 23: Arthur Cockfield: Tax Law and Technology Change
* Part IV
* Section A: Regulating New Technologies
* 24: Lyria Bennett-Moses: Regulating in the Face of Sociotechnical
Change
* 25: Meg Leta-Jones and Jason Millar: Hacking Metaphors in the
Anticipatory Governance of Emerging Technology: The Case of
Regulating Robots
* 26: Maria Lee: The Legal Institutionalization of Public Participation
in the EU Governance of Technology
* 27: Andrew Stirling: Precaution in the Governance of Technology
* 28: Andrew Murray and Mark Leiser: The Role of Non-state Actors and
Institutions in the Governance of New and Emerging Digital
Technologies
* Section B: Technology as Regulation
* 29: Amber Marks, Benjamin Bowling, and Colman Keenan: Automated
Justice?Technology, Crime, and Social Control
* 30: Tjerk Timan, Masa Galic, and Bert-Jaap Koops: Surveillance Theory
and Its Implications for Law
* 31: Lee. A. Bygrave: Hardwiring Privacy
* 32: Fleur Johns: Data Mining as Global Governance
* 33: Jesse L. Reynolds: Climate Engineering, Law, and Regulation
* 34: Karen Yeung: Are Biomedical Interventions Legitimate Regulatory
Instruments?
* 35: Nicholas Agar: Challenges from the Future of Human Enhancement
* 36: Robin Bradley Kar, John Lindo: Race and Law in the Genomic Age: A
Problem for Equal Treatment Under the Law
* Part V: Six Key Policy Spheres
* Section A: Medicine
* 37: John Harris, David Lawrence: New Technologies, Old Attitudes, and
Legislative Rigidity
* 38: Barbel Dorbeck-Jung: Transcending the Myth of Law's Stifling
Technological Innovation - How Adaptive Drug Licensing Processes are
Maintaining Legitimate Regulatory Connections
* Section B: Population, Reproduction, and Family
* 39: Therese Murphy: Human Rights in Technological Times
* 40: Sheila A. M. McLean: Population, Reproduction, and Family
* 41: Colin Gavaghan: Reproductive Technologies and the Search for
Regulatory Legitimacy: Fuzzy Lines, Decaying Consensus, and
Intractable Normative Problems
* Section C: Trade, Commerce, and Employment
* 42: Thomas Cottier: Technology and the Law of International Trade
Regulation
* 43: Kenneth G. Dau-Schmidt: Trade, Commerce, and Employment: The
Evolution of the Form and Regulation of the Employment Relationship
in Response to the New Information Technology
* Section D: Public Safety and Security
* 44: David S. Wall: Crime, Security, and Information Communication
Technologies: The Changing Cybersecurity Threat Landscape and
Implications for Regulation and Policing
* 45: Kenneth Anderson, Matthew C. Waxman: Debating Autonomous Weapon
Systems, Their Ethics, and Their Regulation Under International Law
* 46: Filippa Lentzos: Genetic Engineering and Biological Risks: Policy
Formation and Regulatory Response
* Section E: Communications, Information, Media, and Culture
* 47: Nora A Draper, Joseph Turow: Audience Constructions, Reputations,
and Emerging Media Technologies: New Issues of Legal and Social
Policy
* Section F: Energy, Environment, Food, and Water
* 48: Robin Kundis Craig: Water, Energy, and Technology: The Legal
Challenges of Interdependencies and Technological Limits
* 49: Victor B. Flatt: Technology Wags the Law: How Technological
Solutions Changed the Perception of Environmental Harm and Law
* 50: Robert Lee: Novel Foods and Risk Assessment in Europe: Separating
Science from Society
* 51: Richard Macrory: Carbon Capture and Storage
* 52: Benjamin Pontin: Nuisance Law, Regulation and the Invention of
Prototypical Pollution Abatement Technology: 'Voluntarism' in Common
Law and Regulation
* Part I: Introduction by the Editors
* Law, Regulation, and Technology: the Field, Frame, and Focal
Questions
* Part II
* 1: Roger Brownsword: Law, Liberty, and Technology
* 2: Jeanne Snelling and John McMillan: Equality: Old Debates, New
Technologies
* 3: Tom Sorell and John Guelke: Liberal Democractic Regulation and
Technological Advance
* 4: Thomas Baldwin: Identity
* 5: Donna Dickenson: The Common Good
* 6: Stephen Morse: Law, Responsibility, and the Sciences of the
Brain/Mind
* 7: Marcus Duwell: Human Dignity and the Ethics and Regulation of
Technology
* 8: Morag Goodwin: Human Rights and Human Tissue: the Case of Sperm as
Property
* Part III
* 9: Gregory Mandel: Legal Evolution in Response to Technological
Change
* 10: Antonio Cordella and Francesca Contini: Law and Technology in
Civil Judicial Procedures
* 11: Uta Kohl: Conflict of Laws and the Internet
* 12: O. Carter Snead and Stephanie Maloney: Technology and the
American Constitution
* 13: Stephen Waddams: Contract Law and the Challenges of Computer
Technology
* 14: Lisa Claydon: Criminal Law and the Evolving Technological
Understanding of Behaviour
* 15: Elizabeth Fisher: Imagining Technology and Environment Law
* 16: Han Somsen: From Improvement towards Enhancement: A Regenesis of
Environmental Law at the Dawn of the Anthropocene
* 17: Jonathan Herring: Parental Responsibility: Hyper-parenting and
the Role of Technology
* 18: Giovanni Sartor: Human Rights and Information Technologies
* 19: Dinusha Mendis, Phoebe Li, Diane Nicol, and Jane Nielsen: The
Co-Existence of Copyright and Patent Laws to Protect Innovation: A
Case Study of 3D Printing in UK and Australian Law
* 20: Tonia Novitz: Regulating Workplace Technology: Extending the
Agenda
* 21: Rosemary Rayfuse: Public International Law and the Regulation of
Emerging Technologies
* 22: Jonathan Morgan: Torts and Technology
* 23: Arthur Cockfield: Tax Law and Technology Change
* Part IV
* Section A: Regulating New Technologies
* 24: Lyria Bennett-Moses: Regulating in the Face of Sociotechnical
Change
* 25: Meg Leta-Jones and Jason Millar: Hacking Metaphors in the
Anticipatory Governance of Emerging Technology: The Case of
Regulating Robots
* 26: Maria Lee: The Legal Institutionalization of Public Participation
in the EU Governance of Technology
* 27: Andrew Stirling: Precaution in the Governance of Technology
* 28: Andrew Murray and Mark Leiser: The Role of Non-state Actors and
Institutions in the Governance of New and Emerging Digital
Technologies
* Section B: Technology as Regulation
* 29: Amber Marks, Benjamin Bowling, and Colman Keenan: Automated
Justice?Technology, Crime, and Social Control
* 30: Tjerk Timan, Masa Galic, and Bert-Jaap Koops: Surveillance Theory
and Its Implications for Law
* 31: Lee. A. Bygrave: Hardwiring Privacy
* 32: Fleur Johns: Data Mining as Global Governance
* 33: Jesse L. Reynolds: Climate Engineering, Law, and Regulation
* 34: Karen Yeung: Are Biomedical Interventions Legitimate Regulatory
Instruments?
* 35: Nicholas Agar: Challenges from the Future of Human Enhancement
* 36: Robin Bradley Kar, John Lindo: Race and Law in the Genomic Age: A
Problem for Equal Treatment Under the Law
* Part V: Six Key Policy Spheres
* Section A: Medicine
* 37: John Harris, David Lawrence: New Technologies, Old Attitudes, and
Legislative Rigidity
* 38: Barbel Dorbeck-Jung: Transcending the Myth of Law's Stifling
Technological Innovation - How Adaptive Drug Licensing Processes are
Maintaining Legitimate Regulatory Connections
* Section B: Population, Reproduction, and Family
* 39: Therese Murphy: Human Rights in Technological Times
* 40: Sheila A. M. McLean: Population, Reproduction, and Family
* 41: Colin Gavaghan: Reproductive Technologies and the Search for
Regulatory Legitimacy: Fuzzy Lines, Decaying Consensus, and
Intractable Normative Problems
* Section C: Trade, Commerce, and Employment
* 42: Thomas Cottier: Technology and the Law of International Trade
Regulation
* 43: Kenneth G. Dau-Schmidt: Trade, Commerce, and Employment: The
Evolution of the Form and Regulation of the Employment Relationship
in Response to the New Information Technology
* Section D: Public Safety and Security
* 44: David S. Wall: Crime, Security, and Information Communication
Technologies: The Changing Cybersecurity Threat Landscape and
Implications for Regulation and Policing
* 45: Kenneth Anderson, Matthew C. Waxman: Debating Autonomous Weapon
Systems, Their Ethics, and Their Regulation Under International Law
* 46: Filippa Lentzos: Genetic Engineering and Biological Risks: Policy
Formation and Regulatory Response
* Section E: Communications, Information, Media, and Culture
* 47: Nora A Draper, Joseph Turow: Audience Constructions, Reputations,
and Emerging Media Technologies: New Issues of Legal and Social
Policy
* Section F: Energy, Environment, Food, and Water
* 48: Robin Kundis Craig: Water, Energy, and Technology: The Legal
Challenges of Interdependencies and Technological Limits
* 49: Victor B. Flatt: Technology Wags the Law: How Technological
Solutions Changed the Perception of Environmental Harm and Law
* 50: Robert Lee: Novel Foods and Risk Assessment in Europe: Separating
Science from Society
* 51: Richard Macrory: Carbon Capture and Storage
* 52: Benjamin Pontin: Nuisance Law, Regulation and the Invention of
Prototypical Pollution Abatement Technology: 'Voluntarism' in Common
Law and Regulation
* Law, Regulation, and Technology: the Field, Frame, and Focal
Questions
* Part II
* 1: Roger Brownsword: Law, Liberty, and Technology
* 2: Jeanne Snelling and John McMillan: Equality: Old Debates, New
Technologies
* 3: Tom Sorell and John Guelke: Liberal Democractic Regulation and
Technological Advance
* 4: Thomas Baldwin: Identity
* 5: Donna Dickenson: The Common Good
* 6: Stephen Morse: Law, Responsibility, and the Sciences of the
Brain/Mind
* 7: Marcus Duwell: Human Dignity and the Ethics and Regulation of
Technology
* 8: Morag Goodwin: Human Rights and Human Tissue: the Case of Sperm as
Property
* Part III
* 9: Gregory Mandel: Legal Evolution in Response to Technological
Change
* 10: Antonio Cordella and Francesca Contini: Law and Technology in
Civil Judicial Procedures
* 11: Uta Kohl: Conflict of Laws and the Internet
* 12: O. Carter Snead and Stephanie Maloney: Technology and the
American Constitution
* 13: Stephen Waddams: Contract Law and the Challenges of Computer
Technology
* 14: Lisa Claydon: Criminal Law and the Evolving Technological
Understanding of Behaviour
* 15: Elizabeth Fisher: Imagining Technology and Environment Law
* 16: Han Somsen: From Improvement towards Enhancement: A Regenesis of
Environmental Law at the Dawn of the Anthropocene
* 17: Jonathan Herring: Parental Responsibility: Hyper-parenting and
the Role of Technology
* 18: Giovanni Sartor: Human Rights and Information Technologies
* 19: Dinusha Mendis, Phoebe Li, Diane Nicol, and Jane Nielsen: The
Co-Existence of Copyright and Patent Laws to Protect Innovation: A
Case Study of 3D Printing in UK and Australian Law
* 20: Tonia Novitz: Regulating Workplace Technology: Extending the
Agenda
* 21: Rosemary Rayfuse: Public International Law and the Regulation of
Emerging Technologies
* 22: Jonathan Morgan: Torts and Technology
* 23: Arthur Cockfield: Tax Law and Technology Change
* Part IV
* Section A: Regulating New Technologies
* 24: Lyria Bennett-Moses: Regulating in the Face of Sociotechnical
Change
* 25: Meg Leta-Jones and Jason Millar: Hacking Metaphors in the
Anticipatory Governance of Emerging Technology: The Case of
Regulating Robots
* 26: Maria Lee: The Legal Institutionalization of Public Participation
in the EU Governance of Technology
* 27: Andrew Stirling: Precaution in the Governance of Technology
* 28: Andrew Murray and Mark Leiser: The Role of Non-state Actors and
Institutions in the Governance of New and Emerging Digital
Technologies
* Section B: Technology as Regulation
* 29: Amber Marks, Benjamin Bowling, and Colman Keenan: Automated
Justice?Technology, Crime, and Social Control
* 30: Tjerk Timan, Masa Galic, and Bert-Jaap Koops: Surveillance Theory
and Its Implications for Law
* 31: Lee. A. Bygrave: Hardwiring Privacy
* 32: Fleur Johns: Data Mining as Global Governance
* 33: Jesse L. Reynolds: Climate Engineering, Law, and Regulation
* 34: Karen Yeung: Are Biomedical Interventions Legitimate Regulatory
Instruments?
* 35: Nicholas Agar: Challenges from the Future of Human Enhancement
* 36: Robin Bradley Kar, John Lindo: Race and Law in the Genomic Age: A
Problem for Equal Treatment Under the Law
* Part V: Six Key Policy Spheres
* Section A: Medicine
* 37: John Harris, David Lawrence: New Technologies, Old Attitudes, and
Legislative Rigidity
* 38: Barbel Dorbeck-Jung: Transcending the Myth of Law's Stifling
Technological Innovation - How Adaptive Drug Licensing Processes are
Maintaining Legitimate Regulatory Connections
* Section B: Population, Reproduction, and Family
* 39: Therese Murphy: Human Rights in Technological Times
* 40: Sheila A. M. McLean: Population, Reproduction, and Family
* 41: Colin Gavaghan: Reproductive Technologies and the Search for
Regulatory Legitimacy: Fuzzy Lines, Decaying Consensus, and
Intractable Normative Problems
* Section C: Trade, Commerce, and Employment
* 42: Thomas Cottier: Technology and the Law of International Trade
Regulation
* 43: Kenneth G. Dau-Schmidt: Trade, Commerce, and Employment: The
Evolution of the Form and Regulation of the Employment Relationship
in Response to the New Information Technology
* Section D: Public Safety and Security
* 44: David S. Wall: Crime, Security, and Information Communication
Technologies: The Changing Cybersecurity Threat Landscape and
Implications for Regulation and Policing
* 45: Kenneth Anderson, Matthew C. Waxman: Debating Autonomous Weapon
Systems, Their Ethics, and Their Regulation Under International Law
* 46: Filippa Lentzos: Genetic Engineering and Biological Risks: Policy
Formation and Regulatory Response
* Section E: Communications, Information, Media, and Culture
* 47: Nora A Draper, Joseph Turow: Audience Constructions, Reputations,
and Emerging Media Technologies: New Issues of Legal and Social
Policy
* Section F: Energy, Environment, Food, and Water
* 48: Robin Kundis Craig: Water, Energy, and Technology: The Legal
Challenges of Interdependencies and Technological Limits
* 49: Victor B. Flatt: Technology Wags the Law: How Technological
Solutions Changed the Perception of Environmental Harm and Law
* 50: Robert Lee: Novel Foods and Risk Assessment in Europe: Separating
Science from Society
* 51: Richard Macrory: Carbon Capture and Storage
* 52: Benjamin Pontin: Nuisance Law, Regulation and the Invention of
Prototypical Pollution Abatement Technology: 'Voluntarism' in Common
Law and Regulation