The right to technology is a forgotten human right. Dating back to 1948, the right was established by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (“UDHR”) in response to the massive destruction wrought by technologically advanced weapons in the Second World War. This human right embodies one of the most profound lessons the framers of the UDHR learned from this war: Technology must benefit humanity rather than harm it. It has been more than seventy years since the adoption of the UDHR, and technology has advanced at a rapid pace and become more important than ever in our daily lives. Yet in this age of technology, the right to technology remains obscure, dormant, and ineffective. No other human right has received such scant attention, and the...
This book is for human rights scholars and practitioners who are interested in the practical and con...
Feeney et al. (2018) make a valid argument for restrictions on the exclusivity of foundational techn...
The majority of the world\u27s countries (one exception being the United States) have undertaken a c...
The right to technology is a forgotten human right. Dating back to 1948, the right was established b...
The rapid development of science and technology, particularly in the last generation, has had a trem...
Today, a rights-based approach to technology regulation is central to national and international law...
We all have a human right to enjoy the benefits of scientific progress (the Right to Science [RtS])....
The expansion of the corpus of international human rights to include the right to water and sanitati...
The application of information and communication technology (ICT) gradually takes over every aspect ...
Leading academics, civil servants, lawyers, policymakers, and civil society representatives reflect ...
La creación de las instituciones democráticas modernas durante los últimos dos siglos ha venido acom...
The right to be forgotten has emerged so as to build legal foundations for data subjects to be relie...
The rapid development of information and communication technology has made it imperative that new hu...
Background: The digital age has led to conceptual changes in human rights and their content, underst...
In today\u27s Information Society, one of the most salient paradoxes is the fact that the law of int...
This book is for human rights scholars and practitioners who are interested in the practical and con...
Feeney et al. (2018) make a valid argument for restrictions on the exclusivity of foundational techn...
The majority of the world\u27s countries (one exception being the United States) have undertaken a c...
The right to technology is a forgotten human right. Dating back to 1948, the right was established b...
The rapid development of science and technology, particularly in the last generation, has had a trem...
Today, a rights-based approach to technology regulation is central to national and international law...
We all have a human right to enjoy the benefits of scientific progress (the Right to Science [RtS])....
The expansion of the corpus of international human rights to include the right to water and sanitati...
The application of information and communication technology (ICT) gradually takes over every aspect ...
Leading academics, civil servants, lawyers, policymakers, and civil society representatives reflect ...
La creación de las instituciones democráticas modernas durante los últimos dos siglos ha venido acom...
The right to be forgotten has emerged so as to build legal foundations for data subjects to be relie...
The rapid development of information and communication technology has made it imperative that new hu...
Background: The digital age has led to conceptual changes in human rights and their content, underst...
In today\u27s Information Society, one of the most salient paradoxes is the fact that the law of int...
This book is for human rights scholars and practitioners who are interested in the practical and con...
Feeney et al. (2018) make a valid argument for restrictions on the exclusivity of foundational techn...
The majority of the world\u27s countries (one exception being the United States) have undertaken a c...