Technology / New Trajectories in Law: Penny Crofts and Honni van Rijswijk.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: New trajectories in lawPublication details: New York, Routledge : C.2021Description: 105 pages ; 23 cmISBN:
  • 9780367771379 (pbk.)
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • K487.T4 CRO 2021
Contents:
Stories of technology : the role of legal thinking in shaping techno-legal worlds -- Historical examples of law and technology : civil law, criminal law, slavery and colonialism -- Balance of power and pushing back through the rule of law -- Big tech, the corporate form, and self-regulation -- Critical legal theory and encountering bias in tech.
Summary: Placing contemporary technological developments in their historical context, this book argues for the importance of law in their regulation. Technological developments are focused upon overcoming physical and human constraints. There are no normative constraints inherent in the quest for ongoing and future technological development. In contrast, law proffers an essential normative constraint. Just because we can do something, does not mean that we should. Through the application of critical legal theory and jurisprudence to pro-actively engage with technology, this book demonstrates why legal thinking should be prioritised in emerging technological futures. This book articulates classic skills and values such as ethics and justice to ensure that future and ongoing legal engagements with socio-technological developments are tempered by legal normative constraints. Encouraging them to foreground questions of justice and critique when thinking about law and technology, the book addresses law students and teachers, lawyers and critical thinkers concerned with the proliferation of technology in our lives. (source: Nielsen Book Data)
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Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Barcode
Books Books Africa University Law Library General Stacks K487.T4 CRO 2021 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 0000967113814
Books Books Africa University Law Library General Stacks K487.T4 CRO 2021 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 2 Available 0000967113813
Books Books Africa University Law Library General Stacks K487.T4 CRO 2021 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 3 Available 0000967113815
Books Books Africa University Law Library General Stacks K487.T4 CRO 2021 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 4 Available 0000967113806
Books Books Africa University Law Library General Stacks K487.T4 CRO 2021 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 5 Available 0000967113807
Books Books Africa University Law Library General Stacks K487.T4 CRO 2021 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 6 Available 0000967113818

Includes bibliographical references and index

Stories of technology : the role of legal thinking in shaping techno-legal worlds -- Historical examples of law and technology : civil law, criminal law, slavery and colonialism -- Balance of power and pushing back through the rule of law -- Big tech, the corporate form, and self-regulation --
Critical legal theory and encountering bias in tech.

Placing contemporary technological developments in their historical context, this book argues for the importance of law in their regulation. Technological developments are focused upon overcoming physical and human constraints. There are no normative constraints inherent in the quest for ongoing and future technological development. In contrast, law proffers an essential normative constraint. Just because we can do something, does not mean that we should. Through the application of critical legal theory and jurisprudence to pro-actively engage with technology, this book demonstrates why legal thinking should be prioritised in emerging technological futures. This book articulates classic skills and values such as ethics and justice to ensure that future and ongoing legal engagements with socio-technological developments are tempered by legal normative constraints. Encouraging them to foreground questions of justice and critique when thinking about law and technology, the book addresses law students and teachers, lawyers and critical thinkers concerned with the proliferation of technology in our lives.
(source: Nielsen Book Data)

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