The rise of digital information communication technology has major implications for how states wield coercive power beyond their territorial borders through the extraterritorial geographies of data flows. In examining the geopolitics of data, transnational surveillance, and jurisdiction, this collection makes a significant contribution to the field of global internet governance. It shows how the internet is a forum for geopolitical struggle with states weaponising jurisdiction and exerting power beyond their own borders directly, and via infrastructures owned and operated by transnational technology companies. These dynamics challenge existing conceptual and theoretical categories of contemporary law across the fields of international relat...
The trans-Atlantic dispute over application of the European Union\u27s Data Directive (1995) is disc...
“Digital sovereignty” has become a buzzword in digital policies. Contrary to the imaginary of digita...
Revelations about the US National Security Agency’s mass surveillance programs presented an opportun...
The rise of digital information communication technology has major implications for how states wield...
Facing the fragmentation of digital space in the aftermath of the Snowden revelations, this article ...
The internet is at a crossroads today. Whence once viewed as a borderless domain, today it is spoken...
Cybersecurity and Human Rights in the Age of Cyberveillance is a collection of articles by distingui...
Recent debates on Internet censorship and the role of the state in online communications highlight c...
Because the internet is so thoroughly global, nearly every aspect of internet governance has an extr...
The paper examines the issue of the jurisdiction over personal data from a particular angle: it aims...
Electronic data—everything from e-mails and text messages to Facebook and Instagram posts to Twitter...
Cyberspace is widely recognised as an “object of geopolitical competition” between countries advocat...
In a world where global communications are increasingly dependent on the Internet,\u27 tr...
The trans-Atlantic dispute over application of the European Union\u27s Data Directive (1995) is disc...
“Digital sovereignty” has become a buzzword in digital policies. Contrary to the imaginary of digita...
Revelations about the US National Security Agency’s mass surveillance programs presented an opportun...
The rise of digital information communication technology has major implications for how states wield...
Facing the fragmentation of digital space in the aftermath of the Snowden revelations, this article ...
The internet is at a crossroads today. Whence once viewed as a borderless domain, today it is spoken...
Cybersecurity and Human Rights in the Age of Cyberveillance is a collection of articles by distingui...
Recent debates on Internet censorship and the role of the state in online communications highlight c...
Because the internet is so thoroughly global, nearly every aspect of internet governance has an extr...
The paper examines the issue of the jurisdiction over personal data from a particular angle: it aims...
Electronic data—everything from e-mails and text messages to Facebook and Instagram posts to Twitter...
Cyberspace is widely recognised as an “object of geopolitical competition” between countries advocat...
In a world where global communications are increasingly dependent on the Internet,\u27 tr...
The trans-Atlantic dispute over application of the European Union\u27s Data Directive (1995) is disc...
“Digital sovereignty” has become a buzzword in digital policies. Contrary to the imaginary of digita...
Revelations about the US National Security Agency’s mass surveillance programs presented an opportun...