Law, Liberty and Technology

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Abstract

This chapter assesses the relationship between liberty and technology. Adopting a broad conception of liberty, covering both the normative and the practical optionality of developing, applying, or using some particular technology, four questions are pursued. These questions concern: (i) the patterns of normative liberty in relation to new technologies and their applications; (ii) the gap between normative liberty and practical liberty; (iii) the impact of technologies on basic liberties; and (iv) the relationship between law, liberty, and ‘technological management’. While the expansion or contraction of normative liberties remains relevant, the key claim of the chapter is that, in future, it is the use of ‘technological management’—for a range of purposes, from crime control to the regulation of health and safety, and environmental protection—that needs to be monitored carefully, and particularly so for its impact on real options.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationThe Oxford Handbook of Law, Regulation and Technology
EditorsRoger Brownsword, Eloise Scotford, Karen Yeung
PublisherOxford Univerity Press; Oxford
ISBN (Print)9780199680832
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 20 Jul 2017

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