dc.description.tableofcontents | -- Preface
-- Introduction
-- Part I: General Legal and Philosophical Aspects of the Interaction between Human Rights and New Technologies
1. Human rights in the information society: utopias, dystopias and human values, Giovanni Sartor
2. Knowledge and new technologies: from ethics to politics and law, Maria da Glória F.D.P. Garcia.
-- Part II: Freedom of Expression in the Online Environment
3. To block or not to block European approaches to content regulation, and implications for freedom of expression, Yaman Akdeniz.
-- Part III Intellectual Property, Competition Rules and New Technologies
4. Intellectual property and human rights: Northern and Southern perspectives, Ana E. Santos
5. (Right to) development and international transfer of technology: a competition law perspective, Lúcio Tomé Féteira.
-- Part IV Biobanks, Bioethics and Human Rights
6. Prometheus, Golem & Co: bioconstitution and bodiliness in a ‘(world) risk society’, João Carlos Loureiro
7. Protecting persons v. protecting humans in biobanks, Judit Sándor.
-- Part V Reproductive Technologies and Human Dignity
8. Human reproduction and human dignity as a constitutional concept, Miguel Nogueira de Brito
9. The constitutional debate on stem cell research, human rights and dignity: the law and a recent court ruling in Brazil, Luiz Edson Fachin.
Part VI Balancing Privacy and Security
10. Angels and demons: data protection and security in electronic communications, Pedro Ferreira
11. Privacy, security and new technologies: a Brazilian approach to privacy issues in the public security field, Mario Viola de Azevedo Cunha and Danilo Doneda.
-- Part VII Emerging Issues
12. Proposing a right to identity within the international framework of human rights: issues and prospects, Norbert Nuno Gomes de Andrade and Paul De Hert
13. Legal implications of the privatization of cyber warfare, Lucas Lixinski
14. Internet content filtering in Latin America: reasons and impacts on freedom of expression, Joana Varon Ferraz, Carlos Affonso Pereira de Sousa, Bruno Magrani and Walter Britto
15. Nanotechnology, human rights, patent law and the global South: a brief overview, Ana Nordberg
-- Index. | en |