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Law, Morality and Digital Ethics


ISBN13: 9781399534970
To be Published: July 2025
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £85.00



Compares the discussions on the relations between law and morality in classical legal philosophy to the current debates within European institutions on law and digital ethics.

  • Draws on classics of legal philosophy as well as EU policy documents on the relation between law and ethics-morality
  • Takes an original (Foucault-inspired) problematization approach to the classical debates about the relation between law and morality
  • Engages with and expands upon H.L.A. Hart’s categorization of law and morality relations and with Jeremy Waldron’s account of the Rule of Law
  • Compares the traditional debates in legal philosophy to the current initiatives in the European Union about Artificial Intelligence and digital ethics, thus providing new perspectives on both
  • Offers a legal-philosophical critique of the drawbacks of the increasing invocation of ethics as an alternative way of regulating and governing emerging digital technologies

Invocations of ethics in legal, policy and academic discourses about the governance of digital technologies such as the European Union’s strategy on Artificial Intelligence (AI), recall traditional debates in legal philosophy about the relationship between law and morality. Since ethics has acquired an institutional dimension with dedicated advisory bodies, expert groups and committees, new dynamics have, however, emerged in these debates. Its discourses address the relation between law and morality not, like in the past, within the field of legal theory or jurisprudence, but from the perspective of this institutionalized ethics, which is reflected in new kinds of relations drawn between law and ethics.

By comparing traditional and contemporary debates on this theme and emphasizing the importance of institutional and procedural aspects of the rule of law, the book highlights some undesirable consequences emerging from the institutionalization process and discursive practices of digital ethics, including the delegitimization of citizens by expert-based initiatives and the lack of the checks and balances guarantees of traditional rulemaking.

Subjects:
Jurisprudence
Contents:
1. Introduction: Digital Ethics as a New Site for the Law-Morality Debate?
1.1. Taking Institutionalized Ethics Seriously?
1.2. Structure of the book
1.3. Approach: Problematization in Legal Theory
1.4. Scope and limitations

2. Discourses on Natural law and Legal Positivism
2.1. The Tribunal of Conscience & International Law
2.2. Human Survival & Civil War 15
2.3. Individual Freedom & Revolution
2.4. Ethical Legislation, Sovereign Obedience & The Tribunal of (Legal) Science
2.5. Courts, Genocide & Immoral Laws
2.6. Societal Morality & Legal Enforcement
2.7. Concluding Remarks

3. The Ethification of Innovation Governance
3.1. The Institutionalization of Ethics
3.2. Marking the Boundaries with Law
3.3. Contrasting Legal (and Moral) Theory and Digital Ethics
3.4. Concluding Remarks

4. Ethical rule-making beyond the Rule of Law?
4.1. Expertise and representation
4.2. Checks and balances
4.3. Rule of Law and institutional procedures

5. Conclusion: A New Site for Problematizing Law and Morality

Bibliography