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European Journal of Law and Technology, Volume 2
Volume 2, Number 1, 2011
- Philip Leith:
Editorial.
- David Lewis:
Whistleblowing And Data Protection Principles: Is The Road To Reconciliation Really That Rocky? - Julia Hörnle:
Countering the dangers of online pornography - shrewd regulation of lewd content? - Gregor Heissl:
Jurisdiction for Human Rights Violations on the Internet. - James G. H. Griffin:
The nature of the interface between copyright and contract: A new approach.
- Conall O'Reilly:
Finding Jurisdiction to Regulate Google and the Internet.
- Marc Lauritsen:
The Subtech Bi-Annual Meeting: an overview. - José Renato Gaziero Cella, Claude René Tarrit:
Institutional Integration Of An Ict In Education Solution In A Brazilian University. - Stanley Greenstein:
The Utilization of Information Technology Solutions as a Response to Present Challenges. - Aírton José Ruschel, Aires José Rover, Juliete Schneider:
Using Web Technologies in the Discipline of Law and Informatics.
Volume 2, Number 2, 2011
- Philip Leith:
Pseudonyms, Privacy and Globalization.
- Niels Vandezande:
Identification numbers as pseudonyms in the EU public sector. - Paul Alexander Bernal:
A right to delete? - Philip Leith:
Current Issues in Research Access to Public Register Databases. - Martina Colette Gillen:
Bringing the Globe into Globalization: Models of Capacity Building and Technology Transfer. - Michael Filby:
The Digital Economy Act 2010: Is The DEA DOA?
- Perttu Virtanen:
Poem title list III -A little database outro.
Volume 2, Number 3, 2011
- Philip Leith, Abdul Paliwala:
Editorial.
- Joel D'Silva, Diana Meagan Bowman:
Why the elephant in the room appears to be more than a nano-sized challenge.
- David Berube:
Decision Ethics and Emergent Technologies: The Case of Nanotechnology. - Hailemichael Teshome Demissie:
Justice or Beneficence: What Regulatory Virtue for Nano-Governance? - Roger Strand, Kamilla Kjølberg:
Regulating Nanoparticles: the Problem of Uncertainty. - Harald Throne-Holst, Arie Rip:
Complexities of labelling of nanoproducts on the consumer markets. - Bärbel Dorbeck-Jung:
Soft regulation and responsible nanotechnological development in the European Union: Regulating occupational health and safety in the Netherlands. - Steffen Foss Hansen, Anders Baun, Catherine Ganzleben:
Nanomaterials and the European Water Framework Directive. - Hitoshi Nasu, Thomas Faunce:
The Proposed Ban on Certain Nanomaterials for Electrical and Electronic Equipment in Europe and Its Global Security Implications: A Search for an Alternative Regulatory Approach. - Michael T. Reinsborough, Gavin Sullivan:
The Regulation of Nano-particles under the European Biocidal Products Directive: Challenges for Effective Civil Society Participation. - Douglas K. R. Robinson:
Value chains as a linking-pin framework for exploring governance and innovation in nano-involved sectors: illustrated for nanotechnologies and the food packaging sector. - Margherita Poto:
Food and nano-food within the Chinese regulatory system: no need to have overregulation.Less physicality can produce more power. - Darryl Stuart Jarvis, Noah Richmond:
Regulation and Governance of Nanotechnology in China: Regulatory Challenges and Effectiveness. - Shilpanjali Deshpande Sarma:
How Resilient is India to Nanotechnology Risks? Examining Current Developments, Capacities and an Approach for Effective Risk Governance and Regulation. - William Ryan, Sho Takatori, Thomas Booze, Hai-Yong Kang:
Toward Safe and Sustainable Nanomaterials: Chemical Information Call-in to Manufacturers of Nanomaterials by California as a Case Study. - Colin Gavaghan, Jennifer Moore:
De minimis curat lex: New Zealand law and the challenge of the very small.
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