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"Susi offers a novel non-coherence theory of digital human rights. It explains the change in meaning and scope of human rights rules, principles, ideas and concepts, and the interrelationships and related actors, when moving from the physical domain into the online domain"--
List of contents
Introduction: the distorted image; Part I. The Contextual Challenges and Purpose of The Non-Coherence Theory of Digital Human Rights: 1. Horizontal and vertical governance models and normativity; 2. The ontological dimension-reflections on distorted images and normative fragmentation; 3. The epistemic dimension-rhetoric by and recognition of multiple actors; 4. On the controversy about the relative weight of rights; 5. Constitutional entitlements to human rights in the digital domain; Part II. Reflections On Some Theories and Doctrines: 6. The doctrine of the sameness of rights online and offline; 7. Claims of new internet-specific human rights; 8. The capabilities approach; 9. The frankfurt school and normative order of the internet; 10. The articulation and critical review of self-normativity; 11. The transversality principle (Teubner); 12. Network society approach (Castells); Part III. The Core Elements of The Non-Coherence Theory: 13. Doctrinal changes in scope and the meaning of human; 14. The variance principle and digital transparency; 15. Legal certainty and uncertainty; 16. On foreseeability and non-foreseeability; 17. Reflections from the academic debate; Part IV. The Impact of The Non-Coherence Theory: 18. The e-state and fundamental rights; 19. Proportionality deficit paradox; 20. Automated systems and artificial intelligence; Part V. Internet Balancing Formula: 21. The Internet Balancing Formula; 22. Robert Alexy's views on the internet balancing formula; 23. Reply to Alexy critique; In lieu of the concluding remarks - the trailer for the monograph.
About the author
Mart Susi is Professor of Human Rights Law at the School of Governance, Law and Society, Tallinn University. He has initiated several academic networks and projects involving above 100 academics from around the world and is Chair of Global Digital Human Rights Network.
Summary
Susi offers a novel non-coherence theory of digital human rights. It explains the change in meaning and scope of human rights rules, principles, ideas and concepts, and the interrelationships and related actors, when moving from the physical domain into the online domain.