ICT Law and Internationalisation:A Survey of Government Views

Front Cover
Bert-Jaap Koops, Corien Prins, Hielke Hijmans
Kluwer Law International B.V., 2000 M11 8 - 212 pages
Legal problems abound in the information society. Electronic commerce, copyright, privacy, illegal and harmful content, taxes, wiretapping governments face an enormous challenge to meet the advent of the Internet and ICT with a flexible, up-to-date, and adequate legal framework. Yet one aspect makes this challenge even more daunting: internationalisation.

Law is still to a great extent based on nation states, but the information society is above all a borderless and global society. Territoriality and national sovereignty clash with the need for a global approach to address ICT-law issues. Should states leave everything to the global market, or should they intervene to protect vital national interests? How can one enforce national rules in a world where acts take place somewhere' in Cyberspace?

This book presents the positions on these issues of the governments of the Netherlands, Germany, France, the UK, and the US, as well as of international organisations. How do they think about co-regulation, law enforcement, harmonisation, international cooperation, and alternative dispute resolution? How do they deal with applicable law and online contracts, privacy, international liability of Internet providers, and electronic signatures? What are the implications of the European Electronic Commerce Directive and the draft Crime in Cyberspace convention?

Any legal framework that is to fit the global information society must take into account internationalisation. This volume shows to what extent governments are meeting this challenge.

 

Contents

Towards an appraisal system for legislation
16
Themes
29
The Dutch Position
45
Current Developments in Private
55
Other Developments
65
Governments on Internationalisation and ICT
71
Conclusions
78
2
93
SelfRegulation
137
Private International Law and Online Contracts
145
4
146
Summary and Conclusions
167
Foreign Correspondents
181
Bibliography
195

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