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The Oxford Handbook of Law, Regulation and Technology
The Oxford Handbook of Law, Regulation and Technology
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ISBN No.: 9780199680849
Pages: 850
Year: 202412
Format: UK-Trade Paper (Trade Paper)
Price: $ 71.68
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available (Forthcoming)

Part I: Introduction by the EditorsRoger Brownsword, Eloise Scotford, Karen Yeung: Law, Regulation, and Technology: the Field, Frame, and Focal QuestionsPart II1. Roger Brownsword: Law, Liberty, and Technology2. Jeanne Snelling and John McMillan: Equality: Old Debates, New Technologies3. Tom Sorell and John Guelke: Liberal Democractic Regulation and Technological Advance4. Thomas Baldwin: Identity5. Donna Dickenson: The Common Good6. Stephen Morse: Law, Responsibility, and the Sciences of the Brain/Mind7. Marcus Duwell: Human Dignity and the Ethics and Regulation of Technology8.


Morag Goodwin: Human Rights and Human Tissue: the Case of Sperm as PropertyPart II9. Gregory Mandel: Legal Evolution in Response to Technological Change10. Antonio Cordella and Francesca Contini: Law and Technology in Civil Judicial Procedures11. Uta Kohl: Conflict of Laws and the Internet12. O. Carter Snead and Stephanie Maloney: Technology and the American Constitution13. Stephen Waddams: Contract Law and the Challenges of Computer Technology14. Lisa Claydon: Criminal Law Responses to Increased Scientific and Technological Understanding of Behaviour15.


Elizabeth Fisher: Imaging Technology and Environment Law16. Han Somsen: From Improvement towards Enhancement: A Regenesis of Environmental Law at the Dawn of the Anthropocene17. Jonathan Herring: Parental Responsibility: Hyper-parenting and the Role of Technology18. Giovanni Sartor: Human Rights and Information Technologies19. Dinusha Mendis, Phoebe Li, Diane Nicol, and Jane Nielsen: Intellectual Property Law20. Tonia Novitz: Regulating Workplace Technology: Extending the Agenda21. Rosemary Rayfuse: Public International Law and the Regulation of Emerging Technologies22. Jonathan Morgan: Torts and Technology23.


Arthur Cockfield: Tax Law and Technology ChangePart IVSection A: Regulating New Technologies24. Lyria Bennett-Moses: Regulating in the Face of Socio-technical Change25. Meg Leta-Jones and Jason Millar: Hacking Metaphors in the Anticipatory Governance of Emerging Technology: The Case of Regulating Robots26. Andrew Stirling: The Role of the Precautionary Principle in the Regulation of New and Emerging Technologies28. Andrew Murray and Mark Leiser: The Role of Non-state Actors and Institutions in the Governance of New and Emerging Digital TechnologiesSection B: Technology as Regulation29. Amber Marks, Benjamin Bowling, Colman Keenan: Automatic Justice? Technology, Crime, and Social Control30. Tierk Timan, Masa Galic, and Bert-Jaap Koops: Surveillance Theory and its Implications for Law31. Lee A.


Bygrave: Hardwiring Privacy32. Fleur Johns: Data-mining as Global Governance33. Jesse Reynolds: Climate Engineering, Law, and Regulation34. Karen Yeung: Are Biomedical Interventions Legitimate Regulatory Instruments?35. Nicholas Agar: Challenges from the Future of Human Enhancement36. Robin Bradley Kar and John Lindo: Race and the Law in the Genomic AgePart V: Six Key Policy SpheresSection A: Medicine37. John Harris and David Lawrence: New Technologies, Old Attitudes, and Legislative Rigidity38. Barbel Dorbeck-Jung: Transcending the Myth of Law''s Stifling Technological Innovation: How Adaptive Drug Licensing Processes are Maintaining Legitimate Regulatory ConnectionsSection B: Population, Reproduction, and Family39.


Therese Murphy: Human Rights in Technological Times40. Sheila McLean: Population, Reproduction, and Family41. Colin Gavaghan: Reproductive Technologies and the Search of Regulatory Legitimacy: Fuzzy Lines, Decaying Consensus and Intractable Normative ProblemsSection C: Trade, Commerce, and Employment42. Thomas Cottier: Technology and the Law of International Trade Regulation43. Kenneth Dau-Schmidt: Trade, Commerce, and Employment: the Evolution of the Form and Regulation of the Employment Relationship in Response to the New Information TechnologySection D: Public Safety and Security44. David Wall: Crime, Security, and Information Communication Technologies: The Changing Cyber Security Threat Landscape and Implications for Regulation45. Kenneth Anderson and Matthew C. Waxman: Debating Autonomous Weapon Systems, their Ethics, and their Regulation under International Law46.


Filippa Lentzos: Genetic Engineering and Biological Risks: Policy Formation and Regulatory ResponseSection E: Communications, Information, Media, and Culture47. Nora A Draper and Joseph Turow: Audience Constructions, Reputations, and Emerging Media Technologies: New Issues of Legal and Socail PolicySection F: Energy, Environment, Food, and Water48. Robin Kundis Craig: Water, Energy, and Technology: the Legal Challenges of Interdependencies and Technological Limits49. Victor Flatt: Technology Wags the Law: How Technological Solutions Changed the Perception of Environmental Harm and Law50. Robert Lee: Food Safety51. Richard Macrory and Chiara Armeni: Carbon Capture and Storage52. Benjamin Pontin: Nuisance Law Regulation and the Invention of Prototypical Pollution Abatement Technology: ''Voluntarism'' in Common Law and Regulation.


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