Jurisdiction and the Internet: Regulatory Competence over Online Activity


Autoria(s): Kohl, Uta
Contribuinte(s)

Department of Law & Criminology

Law and Criminology

Data(s)

04/11/2008

04/11/2008

18/10/2007

Resumo

null RAE2008

Which state has and should have the right and power to regulate which site and online event? Who can apply their defamation or contract law, obscenity standards, gambling or banking regulation, pharmaceutical licensing requirements or hate speech prohibitions to any particular Internet activity? Traditionally, transnational activity has been ?shared out? between national sovereigns with the aid of location-centric rules and these can be adjusted to the transnational Internet. But can these allocation rules be stretched indefinitely and what are the costs for online actors and for states themselves of squeezing global online activity into nation-state law? Does the future of online regulation lie in global legal harmonization or is it a cyberspace that increasingly mirrors the national borders of the offline world? This book offers some uncomfortable insights into one of the most important debates on Internet governance.

Identificador

Kohl , U 2007 , Jurisdiction and the Internet: Regulatory Competence over Online Activity . Cambridge University Press .

978-0-521843805

PURE: 78659

PURE UUID: 567dc03d-95d5-49cf-9ec6-127d11005e2e

dspace: 2160/727

http://hdl.handle.net/2160/727

Publicador

Cambridge University Press

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

Tipo

/dk/atira/pure/researchoutput/researchoutputtypes/bookanthology/book