
The Normative Order of the Internet
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Content
- Cover
- The Normative Order of the Internet
- Copyright
- Dedication
- Preface
- Table of Contents
- Leading Theses
- Judgments
- Laws
- Documents
- List of Tables
- Abbreviations
- 1. Introduction
- 1.1 Ubi Societas, Ibi Ius
- 1.1.1 Approaching Online Order
- 1.1.2 Regulating Communicative Spaces as a Historical Constant
- 1.1.3 Distinguishing Cyberspace
- 1.1.4 Norms Without Order?
- 1.2 Situating the Research
- 1.2.1 Within Interdisciplinary Approaches
- 1.2.2 Within (International) Legal Approaches
- 1.2.3 With Regard to the Concept of "Normative Orders"
- 1.3 Hypotheses
- 1.4 Structure
- 2. Foundations of Online Order
- 2.1 A Network of Networks
- 2.1.1 Foundations
- 2.1.2 Beginnings of the Information Society
- 2.1.3 Internet and "Internet(s)"
- 2.2 Criticality of the Internet
- 2.2.1 Conditions of its Functionality
- 2.2.2 Internet Integrity
- 2.2.3 The Internet as/?and Critical Infrastructure
- 2.2.4 Critical Internet Resources
- 2.2.4.1 Concept and Vulnerabilities
- 2.2.4.2 Addressing System
- 2.2.4.3 Technical Standards
- 2.2.4.4 Routing and Interconnections
- 2.3 Common Interest and the Internet
- 2.3.1 Protection of and from the Internet as a Common Interest?
- 2.3.2 Relating Internet Integrity to Human Rights
- 2.3.3 Relating Internet Integrity to Human Development
- 2.3.4 Relating Internet Integrity to International Security
- 2.3.5 Custodial Sovereignty
- 2.4 Challenges of Regulating the Internet
- 2.4.1 Foundational Myths
- 2.4.2 Evolving Composition of the Normative Medium
- 2.4.3 Code and Protocols as Law?
- 2.4.4 Algorithmic Decision-?Making
- 2.5 Conclusions
- 3. Law and Governance of the Internet
- 3.1 Foundational Rules
- 3.2 Applicability of International Law
- 3.2.1 From Disorganized Normativity to the "Ius Necessarium"
- 3.2.2 Toward a Consensus
- 3.2.3 Old Rules or New Rules?
- 3.3 International Law of the Internet
- 3.3.1 Definition
- 3.3.2 International Conventions
- 3.3.2.1 Direct Protection
- 3.3.2.2 Indirect Protection
- 3.3.3 Custom
- 3.3.3.1 Direct Protection
- 3.3.3.2 Indirect Protection
- 3.3.4 General Principles of International Law
- 3.3.4.1 Origin
- 3.3.4.2 Principle of Sovereign Equality
- 3.3.4.3 Non-?Use of (the Threat of) Force
- 3.3.4.4 Non-?Intervention in Domestic Affairs
- 3.3.4.5 Duty of Cooperation
- 3.3.4.6 Peaceful Settlement of International Disputes
- 3.3.4.7 Principle of Equal Rights and Self-?Determination of Peoples
- 3.3.4.8 Principle of Good Faith
- 3.3.4.9 No Harm Principle (Principle of Good Neighborliness)
- 3.3.4.10 Principle of Prevention and Due Diligence
- 3.3.4.11 Principle of Sustainable Development
- 3.3.5 Normative Acculturation
- 3.4 Internet Governance
- 3.4.1 Introduction
- 3.4.2 Concept
- 3.4.3 Actors
- 3.4.4 Evolution
- 3.4.4.1 Early Internet Governance Approaches
- 3.4.4.2 First Normative Commitments
- 3.4.5 Internet Governance Forum Process
- 3.4.6 Politicization
- 3.4.7 Taxonomy of Internet Governance
- 3.4.8 Principle Hype
- 3.4.9 Critique
- 3.4.10 Reform
- 3.5 Order on the Internet?
- 4. Normative Disorder on the Internet
- 4.1 Dynamics of Disorder
- 4.2 Dimensions of Disorder
- 4.2.1 Normative Froth
- 4.2.1.1 WSIS Principles
- 4.2.1.2 New Principles
- 4.2.1.3 Degrees of Normativity
- 4.2.1.4 Consequences
- 4.2.2 Normative Friction
- 4.2.2.1 Problem
- 4.2.2.2 Intermediaries
- 4.2.2.3 Public and Private Spaces
- 4.2.2.4 Technical Norm-?Setting Cyberwar
- 4.2.2.5 Consequences
- 4.2.3 Normative Fractures
- 4.2.3.1 Problem
- 4.2.3.2 International Law and Other Norms
- 4.2.3.3 Universality and Subsidiarity
- 4.2.3.4 Territoriality and Reterritorialization
- 4.2.3.5 Cyberwar
- 4.2.3.6 Trust
- 4.2.3.7 Regime Deficiencies
- 4.3 Fragmentation
- 4.3.1 Forces of Fragmentation
- 4.3.2 Technical Fragmentation
- 4.3.3 Commercial Fragmentation
- 4.3.4 Governmental Fragmentation
- 4.4 Defragmentation
- 4.4.1 Technical Predisposition
- 4.4.2 Internet Invariants
- 4.5 Conclusions
- 5. Theorizing Order(s) on the Internet
- 5.1 Introduction
- 5.2 Legal Theory and the Digital Condition
- 5.2.1 Epistemology of Computer Culture
- 5.2.2 Binary Operations Under Uncertainty
- 5.2.3 Liquid Law and Networked Regimes
- 5.2.4 Dehierarchization and Heterarchy
- 5.2.5 Self-?Constitutionalizing Regimes
- 5.2.6 Internal Politicization of the Lex Digitalis
- 5.2.7 Transnational Constellations
- 5.2.8 Permeability and Regime Dialog
- 5.2.9 Hybrid Legal Spaces
- 5.2.10 Exercising Authority Beyond the State
- 5.2.11 Normative Ordering and Undernormativity
- 5.3 Online Order Theories
- 5.3.1 Internet Constitutionalization
- 5.3.2 Interoperability
- 5.3.3 Jurisdictional Approaches
- 5.3.4 Governance by Microdecisions
- 5.3.5 Governance by Infrastructure
- 5.3.6 Reconceptualizing Governance
- 5.4 A Theory of the Normative Order of the Internet
- 5.4.1 Making Normative Change Visible
- 5.4.2 Theoretical Imports
- 5.5 Envisaging the Normative Turn
- 6. The Normative Order of the Internet
- 6.1 The Normative Turn
- 6.1.1 A New Regulatory Order for the Internet
- 6.1.2 Stopping the Singularity
- 6.1.3 Regulatory Remit
- 6.2 The Nomos of the Internet
- 6.3 Normativity of the Order
- 6.3.1 Explicit and Implicit Normativity
- 6.3.2 Constitutionalization
- 6.3.3 Localization
- 6.4 Legality of the Order
- 6.4.1 The Normative Order of the Internet as a Legal Order
- 6.4.2 Norms of the Order
- 6.4.3 Normative Processes
- 6.5 Principles of the Order
- 6.5.1 Notions of Principles
- 6.5.2 Substantial Principles
- 6.5.3 Procedural Principles
- 6.5.4 Normative Descriptors of the Order
- 6.6 Legitimacy of the Order
- 6.6.1 Conditions of Legitimacy
- 6.6.2 Proceduralizing Legitimacy
- 6.6.3 Legitimation of the Order
- 6.7 Narratives of Justification
- 6.8 Facticity of the Order
- 6.8.1 Facticity and Ordering
- 6.8.2 Facticity and Imperfectness
- 6.9 Conclusions
- 7. The Normative Order of the Internet in National Legal Orders
- 7.1 The Protective Dimension of National Legal Orders
- 7.2 Normative Integration as Legitimation
- 7.3 Constitutional Integration of the Normative Order of the Internet
- 7.3.1 Multinormativity as Reality
- 7.3.2 Permeability
- 7.3.3 Openness
- 7.4 Judicial Integration of the Normative Order of the Internet
- 7.4.1 Threats to Rights as the Normative Background
- 7.4.2 Internet Access as a Precondition for Exercising Fundamental Rights
- 7.4.3 Access and Subsistence Minimum
- 7.4.4 Fundamental Right to Access as a Human Right to Access
- 7.5 Systematic Integration of Tertium Norms
- 7.5.1 Automatic Application
- 7.5.2 Post-?Consent Application
- 7.5.3 Deformalized Application
- 7.5.4 Transposition
- 7.5.5 Referencing
- 7.6 Reterritorialization as a Challenge to the Normative Order of the Internet
- 7.7 Conclusions
- 8. Conclusions
- Bibliography
- Index
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