Use and misuse of new technologies : contemporary challenges in international and European law / editors, Elena Carpanelli and Nicole Lazzerini.
The ever-increasing use of technology is challenging the current status of the law, bringing about new problems and questions. The book addresses this trend from the perspective of International law and European Union law and is divided into three main thematic sections. The first section focuses on...
Saved in:
Online Access: |
Full Text (via Springer) |
---|---|
Other Authors: | , |
Format: | eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Cham :
Springer,
2019.
|
Subjects: |
Table of Contents:
- Intro; Foreword; Preface; Abbreviations; Contents; Contributors; Part I: Legal Implications of the Use of New Technologies in Law Enforcement Activities and Beyond; High-Tech Migration Control in the EU and Beyond: The Legal Challenges of "Enhanced Interoperability"; 1 Introduction; 2 The Many Faces of High-Tech Migration Control: Insights from the Practice; 2.1 Digitalisation in Administrative Processes at the Borders; 2.2 Digitalisation and the Everyday Lives of Migrants and Refugees; 2.3 The Militarisation and Virtualisation of Borders.
- 3 Autonomous Systems at the Border: The Trolley Problem or ... Defining Clear Rules Ex Ante4 EU Integrated Border Management and the "Security Union": A Laboratory for High-Tech Migration and Border Control; 4.1 The Architecture of EU's "Smart Borders"; 4.2 Crafting the EU's "Smart Borders" as an Interoperable Environment; 5 Interoperability as an Encompassing Goal: Crowding Fundamental Rights and Data Protection Out?; 6 Human Mobility Under EU "Smart" Surveillance: Automation, "Dronization" and Intelligence Sharing.
- 7 Concluding Remarks on Enhanced Interoperability, the Crisis of Schengen and the Solidarity PrincipleReferences; Swords Shielding Security? The Use of Databases in Criminal Cooperation within the European Union: Challenges and Prospects; 1 Shielding Security Through the Sword of Information Cooperation: The Evolving Paradigm for Law Enforcement in the EU; 2 Foil, Sabre, or Sword? The Main Features of EU Information Sharing Tools, with Multiple Cooperation Techniques and Diversified Institutional Settings.
- 2.1 Functional Taxonomy: Information Cooperation Tools and Police and Judicial Cooperation Techniques in Criminal Matters2.2 Institutional Taxonomy: Governing Information Cooperation in Criminal Matters; 3 Unconventional Swords. The Privatization of Information Cooperation for Law Enforcement Purposes (and Its Confinement by the Court of Justice); 4 Too Many Swords to Handle! Towards Interoperability of EU Information Systems; 5 Concluding Remarks; References; What Do Human Rights Really Say About the Use of Autonomous Weapons Systems for Law Enforcement Purposes?
- 1 Autonomous Weapons Systems and International Human Rights Law: An Attempt to Introduce a Primitive Debate2 Human Rights Implications of the Use of Autonomous Weapons Systems for Law Enforcement Purposes; 3 The Positive Dimension of Human Rights in the Regulation of Autonomous Weapons Systems; 3.1 The Positive Obligation to Protect the Right to Life; 3.2 The Positive Steps in Order to Secure That the Collection of Data Complies with Human Rights Standards; 4 A Human Rights Oriented Regulation; 5 Conclusive Remarks; References.