Constitutionalising Social Media

دانلود کتاب Constitutionalising Social Media

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کتاب قانون اساسی رسانه های اجتماعی نسخه زبان اصلی

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توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Constitutionalising Social Media

نام کتاب : Constitutionalising Social Media
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : قانون اساسی رسانه های اجتماعی
سری : Hart Studies in Information Law and Regulation
نویسندگان : , ,
ناشر : Hart Publishing
سال نشر : 2022
تعداد صفحات : 319
ISBN (شابک) : 9781509953707 , 9781509953721
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 7 مگابایت



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فهرست مطالب :


Acknowledgements\nContents\nList of Contributors\n1. Introduction\nPART 1. SOCIAL MEDIA AS A MODERN PUBLIC SQUARE\n 2. Social Media and Protest: Contextualising the Affordances of Networked Publics\n I. Introduction\n II. Networked Protest Publics\n III. Country Contexts\n IV. Key Opportunities and Limitations\n V. Augmented Protest, Digital Citizenship and Constitutional Rights\n VI. Conclusion\n 3. The Rise of Social Media in the Middle East and North Africa: A Tool of Resistance or Repression?\n I. Introduction\n II. Social Media as MENA\'s New Public Sphere\n III. MENA\'s Legal Landscape: Constitutional and Statutory Protections\n IV. Leaders Strike Back against Pro-Democracy Resistance\n V. The Tenuous Relationship between Platforms and Governments\n VI. Conclusion\n 4. Legal Framings in Networked Public Spheres: The Case of Search and Rescue in the Mediterranean\n I. Introduction\n II. Social Media Platforms as Sites of Legal Framings\n III. Social Media on SAR: Criminalisation, Securitisation and Externalisation\n IV. Towards a Solidarity-Based Humanitarianism?\n V. Conclusion\n 5. Social Media and the News Industry\n I. Introduction\n II. Major Changes Associated with the Rise of Social Media\n III. The Implications of the Rise of Social Media and Decline of News Media\n IV. Conclusion\nPART 2.\rFUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS AND PLATFORMS’ GOVERNANCE\n 6. Structural Power as a Critical Element of Social Media Platforms\' Private Sovereignty\n I. Introduction\n II. The Regulatory Function of Technology: Unequally Appreciated by Different Actors\n III. Private Ordering to Structure Digital Platforms\' Sovereignty\n IV. Conclusion\n 7. No Place for Women: Gaps and Challenges in Promoting Equality on Social Media\n I. Introduction\n II. Contrasting Online Misogyny\n III. Image-Based Violence and Platform Governance\n IV. Conclusion: The Path Beyond\n 8. Social Media, Electoral Campaigns and Regulation of Hybrid Political Communication: Rethinking Communication Rights\n I. Introduction\n II. Political Communication in the Digital Sphere\n III. Regulating Online Political Advertisements: The Current Landscape\n IV. Tensions between Fundamental Rights\n V. Rethinking Communication Rights\n VI. Conclusion\n 9. Data Protection Law: Constituting an Effective Framework for Social Media?\n I. Introduction\n II. Data Protection Regulation and Social Media\n III. The Global Race to the GDPR and its Constitutionalising Function\n IV. Conclusion and Outlook\nPART 3.\rSTATES AND SOCIAL MEDIA REGULATION\n 10. Regulatory Shift in State Intervention: From Intermediary Liability to Responsibility\n I. Introduction\n II. Theory: From Welfare to Moral Theories\n III. Market: From Innovators to Moderators\n IV. Policy: From Intermediary Liability to Responsibility\n V. Technology: From Human to Algorithmic Enforcement\n VI. Practice: Private Enforcement in Action\n VII. Conclusions\n 11. Government-Platform Synergy and its Perils\n I. Introduction\n II. Governmental Speech Enforcement by Platforms\n III. The Limits of the Constitutional Framework in the Digital Political Economy\n IV. Public-Platform Synergy\n V. Conclusions\n 12. Social Media and State Surveillance in China: The Interplay between Authorities, Businesses and Citizens\n I. Introduction\n II. Infrastructure and Legislation of State Surveillance\n III. Conclusions\n 13. The Perks of Co-Regulation: An Institutional Arrangement for Social Media Regulation?\n I. Introduction\n II. Theoretical Framework\n III. Co-Regulation and Fundamental Rights in Social Media\n IV. Conclusions\nPART 4.\rCONSTITUTIONALISING SOCIAL MEDIA\n 14. Changing the Normative Order of Social Media from Within: Supervisory Bodies\n I. Introduction\n II. Hybridity of Platform Governance\n III. Organising Oversight\n IV. Architectural Design Choices and Development Paths\n V. Reflection and Outlook\n 15. Content Moderation by Social Media Platforms: The Importance of Judicial Review\n I. Introduction\n II. Protection of Speech and Platformisation\n III. The Deutsche Welle Case and its Context\n IV. Challenge(s) in Content Moderation\n V. Why Judicial Review Matters\n VI. Outlook\n 16. Digital Constitutionalism: In Search of a Content Governance Standard\n I. Introduction\n II. International Standards\n III. Civil Society Initiatives\n IV. A Comparison with Facebook\'s Community Standards\n V. Conclusion\nIndex




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