Sale!

Data: New Trajectories in Law 1st Edition – PDF ebook

Data: New Trajectories in Law 1st Edition – PDF ebook Copyright: 2021, Edition: 1st, Author: Robert Herian, Publisher: Routledge, ISBN: 9780367477134, Format: PDF

Original price was: $99.00.Current price is: $23.00.

SKU: 9780367477134 Category: Tag:

Buy Data: New Trajectories in Law 1st Edition PDF ebook by author Robert Herian – published by Routledge in 2021 and save up to 80%  compared to the print version of this textbook. With PDF version of this textbook, not only save you money, you can also highlight, add text, underline add post-it notes, bookmarks to pages, instantly search for the major terms or chapter titles, etc.
You can search our site for other versions of the Data: New Trajectories in Law 1st Edition PDF ebook. You can also search for others PDF ebooks from publisher Routledge, as well as from your favorite authors. We have thousands of online textbooks and course materials (mostly in PDF) that you can download immediately after purchase.
Note: e-textBooks do not come with access codes, CDs/DVDs, workbooks, and other supplemental items.
eBook Details:

Full title: Data: New Trajectories in Law 1st Edition
Edition: 1st
Copyright year: 2021
Publisher: Routledge
Author: Robert Herian
ISBN: 9780367477134
Format: PDF

Description of Data: New Trajectories in Law 1st Edition:
This book explores the phenomenon of data – big and small – in the contemporary digital, informatic and legal-bureaucratic context. Challenging the way in which legal interest in data has focused on rights and privacy concerns, this book examines the contestable, multivocal and multifaceted figure of the contemporary data subject. The book analyses “data” and “personal data” as contemporary phenomena, addressing the data realms, such as stores, institutions, systems and networks, out of which they emerge. It interrogates the role of law, regulation and governance in structuring both formal and informal definitions of the data subject, and disciplining data subjects through compliance with normative standards of conduct. Focusing on the ‘personal’ in and of data, the book pursues a re-evaluation of the nature, role and place of the data subject qua legal subject in on and offline societies: one that does not begin and end with the inviolability of individual rights but returns to more fundamental legal principles suited to considerations of personhood, such as stewardship, trust, property and contract. The book’s concern with the production, use, abuse and alienation of personal data within the context of contemporary communicative capitalism will appeal to scholars and students of law, science and technology studies, and sociology; as well as those with broader political interests in this area.