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The Oxford Handbook of Law, Regulation and Technology

Online ISBN:
9780191800467
Print ISBN:
9780199680832
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Book

The Oxford Handbook of Law, Regulation and Technology

Roger Brownsword (ed.),
Roger Brownsword
(ed.)
Law, King's College London
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Roger Brownsword, King’s College London

Eloise Scotford (ed.),
Eloise Scotford
(ed.)
Faculty of Laws, King's College London
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Eloise Scotford is Professor of Environmental Law at University College London, UK.

Karen Yeung (ed.)
Karen Yeung
(ed.)
Dickson Poon School of Law, Kings College London
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Karen Yeung, King’s College London

Published online:
1 September 2016
Published in print:
20 July 2017
Online ISBN:
9780191800467
Print ISBN:
9780199680832
Publisher:
Oxford University Press

Abstract

This book brings together leading scholars from law and other disciplines to explore the relationship between law, technological innovation, and regulatory governance. It is organized into five parts. Part I provides an overview of the volume, identifies its aims, explains its organization, locates it within existing scholarship, and identifies major themes that emerge from the individual chapter contributions. Part II examines core normative values that are implicated or affected by technological developments and which recur in attempts to ground the legitimacy of emerging technologies within liberal democratic societies. Part III focuses on the challenges that technological development poses for law, legal doctrine, and legal institutions, and the constraints that these legal frameworks pose for the development of technologies. Part IV provides a critical exploration of the implications for regulatory governance of technological development, and considers both attempts to regulate new technologies (typically with the aim of managing risks associated with their emergence while seeking to promote their potential benefits) and the way in which new technologies may be utilized as instruments of regulatory governance with the aim of restraining and managing social risks. Part V explores the interface between law, regulatory governance, and emerging technologies in specific policy sectors, namely: medicine and health; population, reproduction, and the family; trade and commerce; public security; communications, media and culture; and food, water, energy, and the environment.

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