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[ecrea] new book: Private Power, Online Information Flows & EU Law
Wed Jan 11 14:52:30 GMT 2017
I am delighted to announce that my book, Private Power, Online
Information Flows and EU Law: Mind the Gap has just been published by Hart:
http://www.bloomsbury.com/au/private-power-online-information-flows-and-eu-law-9781509900657/
<http://www.bloomsbury.com/au/private-power-online-information-flows-and-eu-law-9781509900657/>
_Launch event_
It will be officially launched in central London (50 Bedford Square,
London, WC1B 3DP) on Tuesday 31 January (6-8pm) with Chris Marsden
(Sussex) and Orla Lynskey (LSE) as discussants. Attendance is free, but
please RSVP to (emma /at/ hartpub.co.uk)
_Description_
This monograph examines how European Union law and regulation address
concentrations of private economic power which impede free information
flows on the Internet to the detriment of Internet users' autonomy. In
particular, competition law, sector specific regulation (if it exists),
data protection and human rights law are considered and assessed to the
extent they can tackle such concentrations of power for the benefit of
users. Using a series of illustrative case studies, of Internet
provision (including the net neutrality debate), search, mobile devices
and app stores, and the cloud, the work demonstrates the gaps that
currently exist in EU law and regulation. It is argued that these gaps
exist due, in part, to current overarching trends guiding the regulation
of economic power, namely neoliberalism, by which only the situation of
market failure can invite ex ante rules, buoyed by the lobbying of
regulators and legislators by those in possession of such economic power
to achieve outcomes which favour their businesses. Given this systemic,
and extra-legal, nature of the reasons as to why the gaps exist,
solutions from outside the system are proposed at the end of each case
study.
_
_
_Endorsement_
'This is a richly textured, critically argued work, shedding new light
on case studies in information law which require critical thinking. It
is both an interesting series of case studies (notably cloud computing,
app stores and search) that displays original and deeply researched
scholarship and a framework for critiquing neoliberal competition policy
from a prosumerist and citizen-oriented perspective.' - Professor Chris
Marsden, University of Sussex
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