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Book Title: Research Handbook on Human Rights and Digital Technology
Editor(s): Wagner, Ben; Kettemann, C. Matthias; Vieth, Kilian
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing
ISBN: 9781785367717
Section Title: Contents
Number of pages: 3
Extract:
Contents List of contributors Introduction to the Research Handbook on Human Rights and Digital Technology Ben Wagner, Matthias C.
Kettemann and Kilian Vieth PART I 1. 2. 3. CONCEPTUAL APPROACHES TO HUMAN RIGHTS AND DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY 5 24 viii 1
Human rights futures for the internet M.I. Franklin There are no rights `in' cyberspace Mark Graham Beyond national security, the
emergence of a digital reason of state(s) led by transnational guilds of sensitive information: the case of the Five Eyes Plus network
Didier Bigo Digital copyright and human rights: a balancing of competing obligations, or is there no conflict? Benjamin Farrand SECURITY
AND HUMAN RIGHTS: BETWEEN CYBERSECURITY AND CYBERCRIME
33
4.
53
PART II 5. 6. 7. 8.
Cybersecurity and human rights Myriam Dunn Cavelty and Camino Kavanagh Cybercrime, human rights and digital politics Dominik Brodowski
`This is not a drill': international law and protection of cybersecurity Matthias C. Kettemann First do no harm: the potential of
harm being caused to fundamental rights and freedoms by state cybersecurity interventions Douwe Korff
73 98 113
129
v
vi
Research handbook on human rights and digital technology INTERNET ACCESS AND SURVEILLANCE: ASSESSING HUMAN RIGHTS IN PRACTICE 157
180
PART III 9.
Access to the Internet in the EU: a policy priority, a fundamental, a human right or a concern for eGovernment? Lina Jasmontaite and
Paul de Hert Reflections on access to the Internet in Cuba as a human right Raudiel F. Peña Barrios Surveillance reform: revealing
surveillance harms and ...
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URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/ELECD/2019/28.html