Technology and Economic and Social Rights
In: Oxford Handbook of Economic and Social Rights, Forthcoming
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In: Oxford Handbook of Economic and Social Rights, Forthcoming
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In: Cambridge Companion to Business and Human Rights, Forthcoming
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New technological innovations offer significant opportunities to promote and protect human rights. At the same time, they also pose undeniable risks. In some areas, they may even be changing what we mean by human rights. The fact that new technologies are often privately controlled raises further questions about accountability and transparency and the role of human rights in regulating these actors. This volume - edited by Molly K. Land and Jay D. Aronson - provides an essential roadmap for understanding the relationship between technology and human rights law and practice. It offers cutting-edge analysis and practical strategies in contexts as diverse as autonomous lethal weapons, climate change technology, the Internet and social media, and water meters. This title is also available as Open Access
In: Duke Law School Public Law & Legal Theory Series No. 2022-47
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In: Annual Review of Law and Social Science, Band 16, S. 223-240
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In: 52 Connecticut Law Review 1029 (2021)
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In: Propaganda, War Crimes Trials and International Law: From Cognition to Criminality 143, Predrag Dojcinovic, Ed., Routledge, 2020
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In: New Technologies for Human Rights Law and Practice (Molly K. Land and Jay D. Aronson eds. CUP 2018)
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In: NYLS Institute for Information Law and Policy White Paper Series
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In: 42(6) European Intellectual Property Review 332-340 (2020)
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This Guide offers a framework and concrete recommendations for interpreting and implementing the Marrakesh Treaty to facilitate the ability of print disabled individuals to create, read, and share books and cultural materials in accessible formats. It conceives of the Marrakesh Treaty as an international instrument that employs the legal doctrines and policy tools of copyright to achieve human rights objectives.
States have long denied basic rights to non-citizens within their borders, and international law imposes only limited duties on states with respect to those fleeing persecution. But even the limited rights previously enjoyed by non-citizens are eroding in the face of rising nationalism, populism, xenophobia, and racism. Beyond Borders explores what obligations we owe to those outside our political community. Drawing on contributions from a broad variety of disciplines - from literature to political science to philosophy - the volume considers the failures of law and politics to guarantee rights for the most vulnerable and attempts to imagine new forms of belonging grounded in ideas of solidarity, empathy, and responsibility in order to identify a more robust basis for the protection of non-citizens at home and abroad. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core