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Zusatztext Informationen zum Autor Roger Brownsword is Director of TELOS (a newly created research centre focusing on technology, ethics, law, and society) and Professor of Law at King's College London. He also maintains a long-standing link with the University of Sheffield as an Honorary Professor in Law. Klappentext Rights, Regulation, and the Technological Revolution confronts a central question facing modern government - how can regulators respond to both the challenges and opportunities presented by a technologically driven society without sacrificing legitimacy for effectiveness, or weakening the essential conditions of a stable, aspirant moral community? Analysing developments across biotechnology, information and communications technology, nanotechnology and neurotechnology, the book explores the difficulties facing the public control of rapid technological change, focusing on the problems of regulatory effectiveness, connection, legitimacy, and compliance. The book argues that as regulators struggle to find adequate frameworks to limit, license and support new technologies, they will increasingly rely on a technological approach to complement, enhance, and even replace traditional legal strategies. The book breaks new ground by offering the first overarching commentary on the relationship between regulators, industry, and wider society as the new technologies of the twenty-first century achieve an ever-greater penetration in our daily lives. Zusammenfassung This book provides the first panoramic commentary on the dynamics of regulation in the face of what is arguably a twenty-first century technological revolution. It examines how rapid technological change has transformed the relationship between regulators and wider society, and analyses the major challenges facing regulation as new technologies continue to develop. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1: The Technologies of the Twenty-First Century: Regulatory Challenge and Regulatory Opportunity Part One: Regulatory Challenge 2: The Challenge of Regulatory Legitimacy I 3: The Challenge of Regulatory Legitimacy II 4: The Challenge of Regulatory Legitimacy III 5: The Challenge of Regulatory Effectiveness 6: The Challenge of Regulatory Connection 7: The Challenge of Regulatory Cosmopolitanism Part Two: Regulatory Opportunity 8: Genetic Databases and the First Signs of Regulatory Opportunity 9: Seizing the Regulatory Opportunity: Code and Control 10: Code and the Corrosion of Moral Community 11: Regulating Technologies: Challenge and Opportunity ...