The Proposed EU Digital Services Regulation 2020: Data Desiderata
In: Max Planck Institute for Innovation & Competition Research Paper No. 21-21
841163 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Max Planck Institute for Innovation & Competition Research Paper No. 21-21
SSRN
In: Proceedings 62nd International FITCE Congress, "Services and Infrastructures Toward Smart Society", 2023
SSRN
In: Greens annotated acts
In: Information Systems for eGovernment, S. 21-41
Presentation slides for a talk during the FAIR Office Austria launch event on June 9th, 2021. Contents: FAIR and public data centers, EU data policy, Open Data Directive (EU) 2019/1024, EU Data Governance Act (DGA) Video recording of the event: https://hdl.handle.net/11353/10.1201049
BASE
In: European data protection law review: EdpL, Band 10, Heft 1, S. 43-56
ISSN: 2364-284X
In: Accepted in IIC (2021) 52:375–378
SSRN
Law and social science scholars have long elucidated ways of governing built around state governance of populations and subjects. Yet many are now grappling with the growing prevalence of practices of governance that depart, to varying degrees, from received models. The profusion of digital data, and the deployment of machine learning in its analysis, are redirecting states" and international organizations" attention away from the governance of populations as such and toward the amassing, analysis, and mobilization of hybrid data repositories and real-time data flows for governance. Much of this work does not depend on state data sources or on conventional statistical models. The subjectivities nurtured by these techniques of governance are frequently not those of choosing individuals. Digital objects and mediators are increasingly prevalent at all scales. This article surveys how scholars are beginning to understand the nascent political technologies associated with this shift toward governance by data.
BASE
In: printed in: Sattler, Andreas and Zech, Herbert (eds.) (2024): The Data Act: First Assessments, Trier, pp.3-22
SSRN
SWP
In: Information Polity: the international journal of government & democracy in the information age, Band 29, Heft 3, S. 261-276
ISSN: 1875-8754
In its regulatory enterprise to improve the conditions of data sharing and reuse, the European Union has enacted new legislation: the Data Governance Act (DGA). The DGA envisages new forms of sharing public sector data (PSD). Based on a legal analysis of the DGA and an in-depth study of data governance literature, this paper highlights what is at stake in the new regulatory framework and argues that more than the mere openness of more PSD will be necessary to ensure that the European Union policy goals are achieved, especially those concerning enhancing innovation for the common good. From this perspective, the paper argues that the public data trust model of data governance and the Responsible Research and Innovation approach offer two powerful tools for public sector data governance. In this context, this paper contributes to the debate about new data governance models and discusses tools and frameworks enabling the use of data for the common good. It also provides insights to public administration practitioners aiming to implement a framework for increased and sustainable PSD sharing.
In: RSC Working Paper 2023/30
SSRN
SSRN