Research Handbook on Human Rights and Digital Technology
Research Handbook on Human Rights and Digital Technology
Global Politics, Law and International Relations, Second Edition
Kettemann, Matthias C.; Montgomery, Susannah; Vieth-Ditlmann, Kilian; Wagner, Ben
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
01/2025
450
Dura
9781035308507
Pré-lançamento - envio 15 a 20 dias após a sua edição
Introduction to the Research Handbook on Human Rights and Digital Technology 1
Ben Wagner, Matthias C. Kettemann, Kilian Vieth-Ditlmann and Susannah Montgomery
PART I CONCEPTUAL APPROACHES TO HUMAN RIGHTS AND
DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY
1 Digitalizing human rights for sustainable internet futures? 5
M.I. Franklin
2 There are no rights 'in' cyberspace 26
Mark Graham
3 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 35
Didier Bigo
4 Online platforms, intermediary responsibility, and human rights: digital
copyright as a site of multiple contestations in the EU 54
Benjamin Farrand
PART II SECURITY AND HUMAN RIGHTS: BETWEEN
CYBERSECURITY AND CYBERCRIME
5 Cybersecurity and human rights 70
Myriam Dunn Cavelty and Camino Kavanagh
6 Cybercrime, human rights and digital politics 94
Dominik Brodowski
7 'This is not a drill': international law and protection of cybersecurity 111
Matthias C. Kettemann and Martin Mu?ller
8 First do no harm: the potential of harm being caused to fundamental
rights and freedoms by state cybersecurity interventions 127
Douwe Korff
PART III INTERNET ACCESS AND SURVEILLANCE: ASSESSING
HUMAN RIGHTS IN PRACTICE
9 Relying on digital principles to complement existing rights: a human
rights assessment of the 2022 European Declaration on Digital Rights
and Principles 168
Cristina Cocito and Paul De Hert
10 Surveillance reform: revealing surveillance harms and engaging reform tactics 193
Evan Light and Jonathan A. Obar
PART IV AUTOMATION, TRADE AND FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION:
EMBEDDING RIGHTS IN TECHNOLOGY GOVERNANCE
11 Liability and automation in socio-technical systems 222
Giuseppe Contissa and Giovanni Sartor
12 Digital technologies, human rights and global trade? Expanding export
controls of surveillance technologies in Europe, China and India 243
Ben Wagner and Stephanie Horth
13 Policing 'online radicalization': the framing of Europol's Internet Referral Unit 263
Kilian Vieth-Ditlmann
PART V ACTORS' PERSPECTIVES ON HUMAN RIGHTS: HOW
CAN CHANGE HAPPEN?
14 When private actors govern human rights 290
Rikke Frank Jorgensen
15 International organizations and digital human rights 311
Wolfgang Benedek
16 Recognizing children's rights in relation to the digital environment:
challenges of voice and evidence, principle and practice 327
Amanda Third, Sonia Livingstone and Gerison Lansdown
17 Silencing identities: LGBTI rights in the digital age 363
Monika Zalnieriute
18 Digital cultural sovereignty: navigating the digital landscape of
European Cultural Heritage Institutions with a decolonial lens 391
Susannah Montgomery and Ben Wagner
Introduction to the Research Handbook on Human Rights and Digital Technology 1
Ben Wagner, Matthias C. Kettemann, Kilian Vieth-Ditlmann and Susannah Montgomery
PART I CONCEPTUAL APPROACHES TO HUMAN RIGHTS AND
DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY
1 Digitalizing human rights for sustainable internet futures? 5
M.I. Franklin
2 There are no rights 'in' cyberspace 26
Mark Graham
3 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 35
Didier Bigo
4 Online platforms, intermediary responsibility, and human rights: digital
copyright as a site of multiple contestations in the EU 54
Benjamin Farrand
PART II SECURITY AND HUMAN RIGHTS: BETWEEN
CYBERSECURITY AND CYBERCRIME
5 Cybersecurity and human rights 70
Myriam Dunn Cavelty and Camino Kavanagh
6 Cybercrime, human rights and digital politics 94
Dominik Brodowski
7 'This is not a drill': international law and protection of cybersecurity 111
Matthias C. Kettemann and Martin Mu?ller
8 First do no harm: the potential of harm being caused to fundamental
rights and freedoms by state cybersecurity interventions 127
Douwe Korff
PART III INTERNET ACCESS AND SURVEILLANCE: ASSESSING
HUMAN RIGHTS IN PRACTICE
9 Relying on digital principles to complement existing rights: a human
rights assessment of the 2022 European Declaration on Digital Rights
and Principles 168
Cristina Cocito and Paul De Hert
10 Surveillance reform: revealing surveillance harms and engaging reform tactics 193
Evan Light and Jonathan A. Obar
PART IV AUTOMATION, TRADE AND FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION:
EMBEDDING RIGHTS IN TECHNOLOGY GOVERNANCE
11 Liability and automation in socio-technical systems 222
Giuseppe Contissa and Giovanni Sartor
12 Digital technologies, human rights and global trade? Expanding export
controls of surveillance technologies in Europe, China and India 243
Ben Wagner and Stephanie Horth
13 Policing 'online radicalization': the framing of Europol's Internet Referral Unit 263
Kilian Vieth-Ditlmann
PART V ACTORS' PERSPECTIVES ON HUMAN RIGHTS: HOW
CAN CHANGE HAPPEN?
14 When private actors govern human rights 290
Rikke Frank Jorgensen
15 International organizations and digital human rights 311
Wolfgang Benedek
16 Recognizing children's rights in relation to the digital environment:
challenges of voice and evidence, principle and practice 327
Amanda Third, Sonia Livingstone and Gerison Lansdown
17 Silencing identities: LGBTI rights in the digital age 363
Monika Zalnieriute
18 Digital cultural sovereignty: navigating the digital landscape of
European Cultural Heritage Institutions with a decolonial lens 391
Susannah Montgomery and Ben Wagner