Academic debates tend focus on attempts to codify and promote communication rights at the global level. This article provides a model to analyse communication rights at a national level by operationalising four rights: access, availability, dialogical rights, and privacy. It highlights specific cases of digitalisation in Finland, a country with an impressive record as a promoter of internet access and digitalised public services. The article shows how national policy decisions may support economic goals rather than communication rights, and how measures to realise rights by digital means may not always translate into desired outcomes, such as inclusive participation in decision-making
The notion of digital rights has recently generated a number of political declarations and civil soc...
This contribution investigates how human rights in the digital age can be considered as an overall f...
The development of the Internet challenges traditional conceptions of information rights. The discou...
Academic debates tend focus on attempts to codify and promote communication rights at the global lev...
International audienceIn a digital context that is profoundly transforming social interactions in di...
The rise of the internet and the subsequent global reach of digital platforms has provided entirely ...
International audienceThis article investigates how human rights in the digital age can be considere...
Hakutermit: information society, right to communicate, freedom of information This thesis explores...
This entry advances theoretical reflections in the area of digital media access and citizen engageme...
The paper explores the relationship between modern communication technologies and constitutional fre...
Abstract / This article investigates how human rights in the digital age can be considered as an ove...
This paper examines issues of national sovereignty in the context of a right to communicate. It firs...
The paper discusses the scientific and policy debate as to whether access to the Internet can be con...
The paper discusses the scientific and policy debate as to whether access to the Internet can be con...
Recent research on digital constitutionalism highlights a rights-based approach to limiting the exer...
The notion of digital rights has recently generated a number of political declarations and civil soc...
This contribution investigates how human rights in the digital age can be considered as an overall f...
The development of the Internet challenges traditional conceptions of information rights. The discou...
Academic debates tend focus on attempts to codify and promote communication rights at the global lev...
International audienceIn a digital context that is profoundly transforming social interactions in di...
The rise of the internet and the subsequent global reach of digital platforms has provided entirely ...
International audienceThis article investigates how human rights in the digital age can be considere...
Hakutermit: information society, right to communicate, freedom of information This thesis explores...
This entry advances theoretical reflections in the area of digital media access and citizen engageme...
The paper explores the relationship between modern communication technologies and constitutional fre...
Abstract / This article investigates how human rights in the digital age can be considered as an ove...
This paper examines issues of national sovereignty in the context of a right to communicate. It firs...
The paper discusses the scientific and policy debate as to whether access to the Internet can be con...
The paper discusses the scientific and policy debate as to whether access to the Internet can be con...
Recent research on digital constitutionalism highlights a rights-based approach to limiting the exer...
The notion of digital rights has recently generated a number of political declarations and civil soc...
This contribution investigates how human rights in the digital age can be considered as an overall f...
The development of the Internet challenges traditional conceptions of information rights. The discou...