Right Regulation and the Regulation of Rights comments critically on the role and limits of law as a shaper of, and responder to, technologies and cultures. By analysing a diverse range of case studies concerned with the roles of people, culture, technology, and law in different settings, and the rules that are constructed to govern those relationships, the book explores three core themes - human flourishing, regulatory architecture, and social exploitation - and asks cross-cutting questions which will be relevant to the regulatory undertaking more broadly. The result is that underexplored connections are identified, new and insightful lessons are offered, and novel policy options and legal pathways are suggested.
Right Regulation and the Regulation of Rights : Law, Technology and Culture