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Digital Constitutionalism: The Role of Internet Bills of Rights


ISBN13: 9781032189055
Published: October 2022
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £125.00



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Investigating the impact of digital technology on contemporary constitutionalism, this book offers an overview of the transformations that are currently occurring at constitutional level, highlighting their link with ongoing societal changes. It reconstructs the multiple ways in which constitutional law is reacting to these challenges and explores the role of one original response to this phenomenon: the emergence of Internet bills of rights.

Over the past few years, a significant number of Internet bills of rights have emerged around the world. These documents represent non-legally binding declarations promoted mostly by individuals and civil society groups that articulate rights and principles for the digital society. This book argues that these initiatives reflect a change in the constitutional ecosystem. The transformations prompted by the digital revolution in our society ferment under a vault of constitutional norms shaped for ‘analogue’ communities. Constitutional law struggles to address all the challenges of the digital environment. In this context, Internet bills of rights, by emerging outside traditional institutional processes, represent a unique response to suggest new constitutional solutions for the digital age.

Explaining how constitutional law is reacting to the advent of the digital revolution and analysing the constitutional function of Internet Bills of Rights in this context, this book offers a global comparative investigation of the latest transformations that digital technology is generating in the constitutional ecosystem and highlights the plural and multilevel process that is contributing to shape constitutional norms for the Internet age.

Subjects:
IT, Internet and Artificial Intelligence Law
Contents:
1. – Introduction
2. – A new constitutional moment
3. – Constitutional counteractions
4. – Norms beyond the state
5. – The constitutionalisation of the digital society
6. – Digital constitutionalism
7. – Towards an Internet Constitution?
8. – The force of declarations
9. – Understanding the digital society
10. – Empowering global people
11. – Translating fundamental rights
12. – Constitutional innovation
13. – Conclusion

Appendix
Bibliography
Books and journal articles
Index