The EU as a global digital actor: institutionalising global data protection, trade, and cybersecurity
This is the first book-length treatment of the advancement of EU global data flows and digital trade through the framework of European institutionalisation. Drawing on case studies of EU-US, EU-Japan and EU-China relations it charts the theoretical and empirical approaches at play. It illustrates ho...
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Oxford
Hart
2022
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Schriftenreihe: | Modern Studies in European Law
Volume 111 |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Zusammenfassung: | This is the first book-length treatment of the advancement of EU global data flows and digital trade through the framework of European institutionalisation. Drawing on case studies of EU-US, EU-Japan and EU-China relations it charts the theoretical and empirical approaches at play. It illustrates how the EU has pioneered high standards in data flows and how it engages in significant digital trade reforms, committed to those standards. The book marks a major shift in how institutionalisation and the EU should be viewed as it relates to two of the more extraordinary areas of global governance: trade and data flows. This significant book will be of interest to EU constitutional lawyers, as well as those researching in the field of IT and data law |
Beschreibung: | xxvii, 230 Seiten 234 mm |
ISBN: | 9781509957040 |
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adam_text | CONTENTS Acknowledgements......................................................................................................... vii Abbreviations and Acronyms....................................................................................... xiii Table of Cases............................................................................................................... xvii Table of Instruments......................................................................................................xxi Table of Legislation....................................................................................................... xxv Introduction: The Framework of Data Institutionalisation................................ 1 I. Overview.................................................................................................. 1 II. Why Institutionalisation? The Normalisation of Institutionalisation.......................................................................... 4 III. On Origins and Terminology: Defining Institutionalisation...............6 IV. Is Institutionalisation EU-Centric?........................................................ 8 V. Whose Institutionalisation? Comparative Approaches to Institutionalisation................................................................................ 11 VI. Arguing that Institutionalisation GoesBeyond Judicialisation........... 14 VII. Informal Organisations and Informal Law-Making: What Role for Institutionalisation?......................................................17 VIII. Institutionalising Data: The Data ‘Forum’
Problem............................ 19 IX. Outline of the Chapters in this Book................................................... 20 1. EU as a Global Digital Actor...........................................................................24 I. Overview: The EU The Internationalist: Becoming a Global Data Actor.......................................................................... 24 IL EU Global Reach Over the Web: An Architecture of Scale............... 26 III. EU Global Reach Through Large-Scale Data Flow Regimes: On Adequacy......................................................................................... 30 IV. Global Alternatives to the GDPR Lack Institutionalisation.............. 34 V. Is the EU a ‘Soft Data Localisation’ Actor?......................................... 39 VI. The EU, the Emerging Digital Sovereign............................................46 VII. Global Capture of Big Tech? European Data Spaces and the DMA/DSA........................................................................... 50 VIII. The EU’s Emerging Architectural Infrastructure of AI: Global Lead on Regulatory Capture.................................................... 54 IX. Conclusions.......................................................................................... 56
x Contents 2. lhe EU as a Digital Trade Actor...................................................................... 57 I. Overview: Digital Trade - A Fragmented and De-institutionalised Landscape?....................................................................................... 57 II. The EU Moving Beyond the ‘Mid-Way Position on Digital Trade..... 61 III. The WTO as a Forum for the Future of Digital Trade?...................... 65 IV. Data Localisation in Trade Agreements.............................................. 67 V. FTAs and Data Privacy: Why the EU’s Institutionalisation of Data Privacy Matters..................................................................... 69 VI. The EU Horizontal Strategy for Data: The Impact of the Model Clauses.......................................................................................... 73 VIL EU Digital Trade Regulatory Cooperation: Deepening the Nature of Institutionalisation............................................... 76 VIII. Conclusion............................................................................................... 81 3. The EU as a Cyber Actor: The Evolving Architecture of EU Cyber Law: Beyond Weak Institutionalisation.................................................................. 82 I. Overview: The EU as an International Cyber Actor............................ 82 II. The Evolution of EU Cyber Law-Making: Towards Regulatory Capture........................................................ 86 III. International Trade and Cybersecurity: The EU Exportation of
Institutionalisation?................................................................ 89 IV. Cybersecurity Provisions in EU Trade and Cooperation Agreements............................................................ 92 V. The EU Cybersecurity ‘Act’, 2019: The Beginnings of‘Strong’ Internal and External Institutionalisation?................................ 95 VI. The Institutional Design of 5G Regulation: The Periphery of the Single Market and the Global................. 97 VIL EU-Council of Europe Relations: Fostering Stronger Institutionalised Spaces?............................................................ 99 VIII. Case Studies........................................................................................... 103 A. EU-US Cybercrime and Cybersecurity Cooperation................103 B. EU-Japan Cybersecurity Cooperation........................................ 105 C. EU-China Cybersecurity.............................................................. 107 IX. Conclusions........................................................................................... 108 4. On the Transatlantic Divide:Beyond Weak Institutionalisation............ 109 I. Overview................................................................................................ 109 II. Institutionalisation Attempts in EU-US Digital Trade and Data Flows.................................................................................... 116 III. Transatlantic Data Flow Regimes: Law and Governance.................. 118 A. EU-US
PNR.................................................................................. 120 B TFTP Law and Governance......................................................... 122 C. The EU-US Umbrella Agreement............................................... 123 D. The EU-US E-Evidence Agreement Negotiations..................... 125
Contents IV. V. VI. VII. xi From EU-US Safe Harbour to the EU-US Privacy Shield Agreements: The Ever Weaker Institutionalisation of Hybrid Governance........................................................................................... 129 The Schrems Litigation on the EU-US Privacy Shield...................... 134 The Future of Transatlantic Data Institutionalisation: Towards Convergence?...............................................................138 Conclusions......................................................................................... 145 5. East Asian Convergence: EU-Japan Relations and Data............................ 146 I. Overview of EU-Japan Relations in Context: The Slow-burn of Convergence 146 II. The EU-Japan EPA and SPA: Going Beyond a Law-Light Institution-Light Partnership.............................................................. 149 III. The EU-Japan EPA Negotiations: The Moving Place of Data Towards the Adequacy Decision................................. 151 IV. Criticism of the EU-Japan Adequacy Decision: Forced Convergence?....................................................................................... 153 V. EU-Japan EPA: Digital Trade and Data Flows as Best Practice?..... 156 VI. EU-Japan Digital Trade Regulatory Cooperation: Incipient Institutionalisation............................................................................... 159 VIL Conclusions.......................................................................................... 161 6. East Asian Reverse Convergence with the EU? Closing Down the Gap in
Emerging EU-China Relations.......................................................... 163 I. Overview: EU-China Relations: No Overarching Legal Framework................................................................................ 163 II. The EU-China CAI and GI Agreements: Beyond a Limited Institutionalisation Agenda................................................................166 III. EU Member States’ Engagement with the Law-Light, Institution-Light Belt and Road Initiative........................................ 169 IV. Cyber Law, the State and China: Behind the Great Firewall of China...................................................................................... 173 V. The Chinese Approach to Cybersecurity: Deeper Institutionalisation but Away From the EU?......................................176 VI. Privacy and Chinese Law: Moving Gradually Towards the EU?..... 181 VIL Global Alternatives to the ‘Gold Standard’ of EU Data Laws for China?.......................................................................... 184 VIII. Conclusions.......................................................................................... 189 Conclusions............................................................................................................. 191 Bibliography...............................................................................................................193 Index......................................................................................................................... 219
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adam_txt |
CONTENTS Acknowledgements. vii Abbreviations and Acronyms. xiii Table of Cases. xvii Table of Instruments.xxi Table of Legislation. xxv Introduction: The Framework of Data Institutionalisation. 1 I. Overview. 1 II. Why Institutionalisation? The Normalisation of Institutionalisation. 4 III. On Origins and Terminology: Defining Institutionalisation.6 IV. Is Institutionalisation EU-Centric?. 8 V. Whose Institutionalisation? Comparative Approaches to Institutionalisation. 11 VI. Arguing that Institutionalisation GoesBeyond Judicialisation. 14 VII. Informal Organisations and Informal Law-Making: What Role for Institutionalisation?.17 VIII. Institutionalising Data: The Data ‘Forum’
Problem. 19 IX. Outline of the Chapters in this Book. 20 1. EU as a Global Digital Actor.24 I. Overview: The EU The Internationalist: Becoming a Global Data Actor. 24 IL EU Global Reach Over the Web: An Architecture of Scale. 26 III. EU Global Reach Through Large-Scale Data Flow Regimes: On Adequacy. 30 IV. Global Alternatives to the GDPR Lack Institutionalisation. 34 V. Is the EU a ‘Soft Data Localisation’ Actor?. 39 VI. The EU, the Emerging Digital Sovereign.46 VII. Global Capture of Big Tech? European Data Spaces and the DMA/DSA. 50 VIII. The EU’s Emerging Architectural Infrastructure of AI: Global Lead on Regulatory Capture. 54 IX. Conclusions. 56
x Contents 2. lhe EU as a Digital Trade Actor. 57 I. Overview: Digital Trade - A Fragmented and De-institutionalised Landscape?. 57 II. The EU Moving Beyond the ‘Mid-Way Position on Digital Trade. 61 III. The WTO as a Forum for the Future of Digital Trade?. 65 IV. Data Localisation in Trade Agreements. 67 V. FTAs and Data Privacy: Why the EU’s Institutionalisation of Data Privacy Matters. 69 VI. The EU Horizontal Strategy for Data: The Impact of the Model Clauses. 73 VIL EU Digital Trade Regulatory Cooperation: Deepening the Nature of Institutionalisation. 76 VIII. Conclusion. 81 3. The EU as a Cyber Actor: The Evolving Architecture of EU Cyber Law: Beyond Weak Institutionalisation. 82 I. Overview: The EU as an International Cyber Actor. 82 II. The Evolution of EU Cyber Law-Making: Towards Regulatory Capture. 86 III. International Trade and Cybersecurity: The EU Exportation of
Institutionalisation?. 89 IV. Cybersecurity Provisions in EU Trade and Cooperation Agreements. 92 V. The EU Cybersecurity ‘Act’, 2019: The Beginnings of‘Strong’ Internal and External Institutionalisation?. 95 VI. The Institutional Design of 5G Regulation: The Periphery of the Single Market and the Global. 97 VIL EU-Council of Europe Relations: Fostering Stronger Institutionalised Spaces?. 99 VIII. Case Studies. 103 A. EU-US Cybercrime and Cybersecurity Cooperation.103 B. EU-Japan Cybersecurity Cooperation. 105 C. EU-China Cybersecurity. 107 IX. Conclusions. 108 4. On the Transatlantic Divide:Beyond Weak Institutionalisation. 109 I. Overview. 109 II. Institutionalisation Attempts in EU-US Digital Trade and Data Flows. 116 III. Transatlantic Data Flow Regimes: Law and Governance. 118 A. EU-US
PNR. 120 B TFTP Law and Governance. 122 C. The EU-US Umbrella Agreement. 123 D. The EU-US E-Evidence Agreement Negotiations. 125
Contents IV. V. VI. VII. xi From EU-US Safe Harbour to the EU-US Privacy Shield Agreements: The Ever Weaker Institutionalisation of Hybrid Governance. 129 The Schrems Litigation on the EU-US Privacy Shield. 134 The Future of Transatlantic Data Institutionalisation: Towards Convergence?.138 Conclusions. 145 5. East Asian Convergence: EU-Japan Relations and Data. 146 I. Overview of EU-Japan Relations in Context: The Slow-burn of Convergence 146 II. The EU-Japan EPA and SPA: Going Beyond a Law-Light Institution-Light Partnership. 149 III. The EU-Japan EPA Negotiations: The Moving Place of Data Towards the Adequacy Decision. 151 IV. Criticism of the EU-Japan Adequacy Decision: Forced Convergence?. 153 V. EU-Japan EPA: Digital Trade and Data Flows as Best Practice?. 156 VI. EU-Japan Digital Trade Regulatory Cooperation: Incipient Institutionalisation. 159 VIL Conclusions. 161 6. East Asian Reverse Convergence with the EU? Closing Down the Gap in
Emerging EU-China Relations. 163 I. Overview: EU-China Relations: No Overarching Legal Framework. 163 II. The EU-China CAI and GI Agreements: Beyond a Limited Institutionalisation Agenda.166 III. EU Member States’ Engagement with the Law-Light, Institution-Light Belt and Road Initiative. 169 IV. Cyber Law, the State and China: Behind the Great Firewall of China. 173 V. The Chinese Approach to Cybersecurity: Deeper Institutionalisation but Away From the EU?.176 VI. Privacy and Chinese Law: Moving Gradually Towards the EU?. 181 VIL Global Alternatives to the ‘Gold Standard’ of EU Data Laws for China?. 184 VIII. Conclusions. 189 Conclusions. 191 Bibliography.193 Index. 219 |
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spelling | Fahey, Elaine Verfasser (DE-588)1022161121 aut The EU as a global digital actor institutionalising global data protection, trade, and cybersecurity Oxford Hart 2022 © 2022 xxvii, 230 Seiten 234 mm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Modern Studies in European Law Volume 111 This is the first book-length treatment of the advancement of EU global data flows and digital trade through the framework of European institutionalisation. Drawing on case studies of EU-US, EU-Japan and EU-China relations it charts the theoretical and empirical approaches at play. It illustrates how the EU has pioneered high standards in data flows and how it engages in significant digital trade reforms, committed to those standards. The book marks a major shift in how institutionalisation and the EU should be viewed as it relates to two of the more extraordinary areas of global governance: trade and data flows. This significant book will be of interest to EU constitutional lawyers, as well as those researching in the field of IT and data law Europäische Union (DE-588)5098525-5 gnd rswk-swf bicssc / E-commerce law bicssc / Data protection law bisacsh / LAW / Computer & Internet Netzpolitik (DE-588)1182361293 gnd rswk-swf Internationale Politik (DE-588)4072885-7 gnd rswk-swf Europäische Union (DE-588)5098525-5 b Netzpolitik (DE-588)1182361293 s Internationale Politik (DE-588)4072885-7 s DE-604 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe, PDF 978-1-50995-706-4 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe, EPUB 978-1-50995-705-7 Modern Studies in European Law Volume 111 (DE-604)BV019342531 111 Digitalisierung UB Bamberg - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=034294192&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Fahey, Elaine The EU as a global digital actor institutionalising global data protection, trade, and cybersecurity Modern Studies in European Law Europäische Union (DE-588)5098525-5 gnd bicssc / E-commerce law bicssc / Data protection law bisacsh / LAW / Computer & Internet Netzpolitik (DE-588)1182361293 gnd Internationale Politik (DE-588)4072885-7 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)5098525-5 (DE-588)1182361293 (DE-588)4072885-7 |
title | The EU as a global digital actor institutionalising global data protection, trade, and cybersecurity |
title_auth | The EU as a global digital actor institutionalising global data protection, trade, and cybersecurity |
title_exact_search | The EU as a global digital actor institutionalising global data protection, trade, and cybersecurity |
title_exact_search_txtP | The EU as a global digital actor institutionalising global data protection, trade, and cybersecurity |
title_full | The EU as a global digital actor institutionalising global data protection, trade, and cybersecurity |
title_fullStr | The EU as a global digital actor institutionalising global data protection, trade, and cybersecurity |
title_full_unstemmed | The EU as a global digital actor institutionalising global data protection, trade, and cybersecurity |
title_short | The EU as a global digital actor |
title_sort | the eu as a global digital actor institutionalising global data protection trade and cybersecurity |
title_sub | institutionalising global data protection, trade, and cybersecurity |
topic | Europäische Union (DE-588)5098525-5 gnd bicssc / E-commerce law bicssc / Data protection law bisacsh / LAW / Computer & Internet Netzpolitik (DE-588)1182361293 gnd Internationale Politik (DE-588)4072885-7 gnd |
topic_facet | Europäische Union bicssc / E-commerce law bicssc / Data protection law bisacsh / LAW / Computer & Internet Netzpolitik Internationale Politik |
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