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Contents

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 May 2022

Giovanni De Gregorio
Affiliation:
University of Oxford

Summary

Type
Chapter
Information
Digital Constitutionalism in Europe
Reframing Rights and Powers in the Algorithmic Society
, pp. ix - xii
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NCCreative Common License - ND
This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/cclicenses/

Contents

  1. Foreword

    Oreste Pollicino

  2. Acknowledgements

  3. 1Digital Constitutionalism: An Introduction

    1. 1.1Reframing Constitutionalism in the Digital Age

    2. 1.2Paths of Constitutionalisation

    3. 1.3Governing the Algorithmic Society

    4. 1.4The Forgotten Talent of European Constitutionalism

    5. 1.5Investigating European Digital Constitutionalism

    6. 1.6Research Structure

  4. 2The Rise of European Digital Constitutionalism

    1. 2.1Moving towards European Digital Constitutionalism

    2. 2.2The Charm of Digital Liberalism

      1. 2.2.1Immunising Online Intermediaries

      2. 2.2.2Ensuring the Free Circulation of Personal Data

    3. 2.3Judicial Activism As a Bridge

      1. 2.3.1The Constitutional Dimension of Online Intermediaries

      2. 2.3.2The Judicial Path towards Digital Privacy

    4. 2.4The Reaction of European Digital Constitutionalism

      1. 2.4.1Democratising Content Moderation

      2. 2.4.2Centring a Personal Data Risk-Based Approach

    5. 2.5Freedoms and Powers in the Algorithmic Society

  5. 3The Law of the Platforms

    1. 3.1From Public to Private As from Atoms to Bits

    2. 3.2The Governance Shift

      1. 3.2.1The First Constitutional Asymmetry

      2. 3.2.2The Second Constitutional Asymmetry

    3. 3.3Delegated Exercise of Quasi-Public Powers Online

      1. 3.3.1Delegating Powers on Content

      2. 3.3.2Delegating Powers on Data

    4. 3.4Autonomous Exercise of Quasi-Public Powers Online

      1. 3.4.1A New Status Subjectionis or Digital Social Contract

      2. 3.4.2The Exercise of Autonomous Powers

    5. 3.5Converging Powers in the Algorithmic Society

  6. 4From Parallel Tracks to Overlapping Layers

    1. 4.1The Intimate Connection between Content and Data

    2. 4.2An Evolving Relationship on Different Constitutional Grounds

    3. 4.3The Blurring Lines between Content and Data

      1. 4.3.1Active Providers and Data Controllers

      2. 4.3.2From the Takedown of Content to the Delist of Data

    4. 4.4From Legal Divergence to Convergence

      1. 4.4.1Constitutional Conflict and Converging Values

      2. 4.4.2From Content to Process

      3. 4.4.3Content and Data Liability

    5. 4.5The Challenges Ahead in the Field of Content and Data

  7. 5Digital Constitutionalism and Freedom of Expression

    1. 5.1Expressions in the Algorithmic Society

    2. 5.2From the Free Marketplace of Ideas …

    3. 5.3… To the Algorithmic Marketplace of Ideas

      1. 5.3.1The Public Sphere in the Age of Algorithms

      2. 5.3.2The Logic of Moderation

      3. 5.3.3Private Enforcement of Freedom of Expression

    4. 5.4The First Reaction of European Digital Constitutionalism

    5. 5.5Horizontal Effect Filling Regulatory Gaps

    6. 5.6Rethinking Media Pluralism in the Age of Online Platforms

      1. 5.6.1The Positive Side of Freedom of Expression

      2. 5.6.2The Passive Side of Freedom of Expression

      3. 5.6.3The Digital Services Act

    7. 5.7Expressions and Personal Data

  8. 6Digital Constitutionalism, Privacy and Data Protection

    1. 6.1Data in the Algorithmic Society

    2. 6.2From the Right to Be Let Alone …

    3. 6.3…To Privacy and Data Protection in the Age of Big Data

    4. 6.4The Constitutional Challenges of Big Data

      1. 6.4.1The Blurring Boundaries of Personal Data

      2. 6.4.2Clashing General Principles

      3. 6.4.3The Freedom from Algorithmic Processing

    5. 6.5The Constitutional Reframing of the GDPR

      1. 6.5.1Recentring Human Dignity

      2. 6.5.2Conflicting Positions and Proportionality

      3. 6.5.3Enhancing Due Process

    6. 6.6Constitutional Values in the Algorithmic Society

  9. 7The Road Ahead of European Digital Constitutionalism

    1. 7.1The Consolidation of European Digital Constitutionalism

    2. 7.2Values: Digital Humanism versus Digital Capitalism

    3. 7.3Governance: Public Authority versus Private Ordering

    4. 7.4Scope: Constitutional Imperialism versus Constitutional Protectionism

    5. 7.5Conclusions: The Constitutional Lesson Learnt and the Digital Road Ahead

  10. Bibliography

  11. Index

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