Provides a roadmap for understanding the relationship between technology and human rights law and practice. This title is also available as Open Access.
Provides a roadmap for understanding the relationship between technology and human rights law and practice. This title is also available as Open Access.
1. The promise and peril of human rights technology Molly K. Land and Jay D. Aronson; Part I. Normative Approaches to Technology and Human Rights: 2. Safeguarding human rights from problematic technologies Lea Shaver; 3. Climate change, human rights, and technology transfer: normative challenges and technical opportunities Dalindyebo Shabalala; 4. Judging bioethics and human rights Thérèse Murphy; 5. Drones, automated weapons, and private military contractors: challenges to domestic and international legal regimes governing armed conflict Laura A. Dickinson; Part II. Technology and Human Rights Enforcement: 6. The utility of user generated content in human rights investigations Jay D. Aronson; 7. Big data analytics and human rights: privacy considerations in context Mark Latonero; 8. The challenging power of data visualization for human rights advocacy John Emerson, Margaret L. Satterthwaite and Anshul Vikram Pandey; 9. Risk and the pluralism of digital human rights fact-finding and advocacy Ella McPherson; Part III. Beyond Public/Private: States, Companies, and Citizens: 10. Digital communications and the evolving right to privacy Lisl Brunner; 11. Human rights and private actors in the online domain Rikke Frank Jørgensen; 12. Technology, self-inflicted vulnerability, and human rights G. Alex Sinha; 13. The future of human rights technology: a practitioner's view Enrique Piracés; Index.
1. The promise and peril of human rights technology Molly K. Land and Jay D. Aronson; Part I. Normative Approaches to Technology and Human Rights: 2. Safeguarding human rights from problematic technologies Lea Shaver; 3. Climate change, human rights, and technology transfer: normative challenges and technical opportunities Dalindyebo Shabalala; 4. Judging bioethics and human rights Thérèse Murphy; 5. Drones, automated weapons, and private military contractors: challenges to domestic and international legal regimes governing armed conflict Laura A. Dickinson; Part II. Technology and Human Rights Enforcement: 6. The utility of user generated content in human rights investigations Jay D. Aronson; 7. Big data analytics and human rights: privacy considerations in context Mark Latonero; 8. The challenging power of data visualization for human rights advocacy John Emerson, Margaret L. Satterthwaite and Anshul Vikram Pandey; 9. Risk and the pluralism of digital human rights fact-finding and advocacy Ella McPherson; Part III. Beyond Public/Private: States, Companies, and Citizens: 10. Digital communications and the evolving right to privacy Lisl Brunner; 11. Human rights and private actors in the online domain Rikke Frank Jørgensen; 12. Technology, self-inflicted vulnerability, and human rights G. Alex Sinha; 13. The future of human rights technology: a practitioner's view Enrique Piracés; Index.
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