Research handbook in data science and law
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Research handbook in data science and law
(Research handbooks in information law)
Edward Elgar Pub., c2018
- : cased
Available at / 7 libraries
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University of Tsukuba Library, Library on Library and Information Science
007.3-Ma3310019003204
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The generation and use of data in society has seen exponential growth in recent years. The emergent field of data science, concerned with understanding and analyzing this data, can be applied to applications spanning from healthcare and urban planning to smart household devices. The legal questions which accompany the rise of these technologies, however, remains underexplored. Breaking new ground this Research Handbook maps the legal implications of the emergence of data science.
Drawing on comparative perspectives, this Research Handbook approaches the subject from different legal domains, considering the possibilities and limitations of the current legal framework. Reflecting on whether further regulation is needed to address the ethical and legal problems raised by data science, the contributors examine how the practice is, and should be, regulated and how it influences the law, judiciary, and legal research. The book makes a vital contribution to the emerging field of data science and law as a discipline, and covers data science methodologies and tools essential for both legal practice and scholarship.
The Research Handbook in Data Science and Law will be an important resource for students interested in data and technology law, as well as for legal scholars and practitioners in the field. Data scientists seeking an introduction to the law surrounding the field will also find this Research Handbook invaluable.
Contributors include: A. Berlee, C. Busch, A. Carlson, M.O. Cuevas, B. Custers, A. Daly, A. De Franceschi, W. Kaufmann, A. Klop, S. Kreifels, K.M. Kryla-Cudna, A.J.F. Lafarre, V. Mak, M. Mattioli, R. Nurullaev, R. Podszun, M.G. Porcedda, C. Prins, S. Ranchordas, R. Russo, K.K.E.C.T. Swinnen, P. Szulewski, E.T.T. Tai, H. U
Table of Contents
Contents:
1. Introduction
Vanessa Mak, Eric Tjong Tjin Tai and Anna Berlee
PART I REGULATING DATA SCIENCE
2. Contract and consumer law
Vanessa Mak
3. Liability for data loss
Vincenzo Zeno-Zencovitch
4. Liability for (semi)autonomous systems: robots and algorithms
Eric Tjong Tjin Tai
5. Consumer Contracts and the Internet of Things
Katarzyna Kryla-Cudna
6. Pledge and attachment of data files under Belgian Law
Koen Swinnen
7. Data and intellectual property law
Michael Mattioli
8. Legal tech and blockchain for corporate governance and shareholders
Anne Lafarre and Christoph van der Elst
9. Data and competition law
Rupprecht Podszun and Stefan Kreifels
10. Data science, data crime and the law
Maria Grazia Porcedda and David S. Wall
11. Data-driven regulation and governance in smart cities
Sofia Ranchordas and Abram Klop
12. Data science and public administration research: connecting agency rules and red tape
Wesley Kaufamnn
13. Data science and taxation
Ronald Russo
14. Data localization measures and their impacts on data science
Helena Ursic, Ruslan Nurullaev, Michel Olmedo Cuevas and Pawel Szulewski
PART II DEVELOPING A NEW DISCIPLINE
15. Methods of data research for law
Bart Custers
16. Data and fundamental rights
Angela Daly, Anna Carlson and Tess Van Geelen
17. Granular legal norms: big data and the personalization of private law
Christoph Busch and Alberto De Franceschi
18. Data analysis, artificial intelligence and the judiciary system
Bart Jan van Ettekoven and Corien Prins
19. Conclusion
Vanessa Mak, Eric Tjong Tjin Tai and Anna Berlee
Index
by "Nielsen BookData"