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El. knyga: Technology and Governance Beyond the State: The Rule of Non-Law

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This book explores how information and communications technologies are adapted, governed, and reinterpreted in areas where the state has limited reach.

This book will be of great interest to students of Socio-Legal Studies, Science and Technology Studies, (Critical) Security Studies and International Relations.



This book explores how information and communications technologies are adapted, governed, and reinterpreted in areas where the state has limited reach.

The governance and regulation of new technologies, from social media to AI, has never seemed more urgent. Efforts to harness the potential benefits, to encourage innovation and novel applications, yet restrain the known and unknown harmful aspects of these technologies, have posed unprecedented challenges. This book brings together an eclectic collection of cases from around the world – from the favelas in Brazil, to the border regions of Ethiopia and Somalia, to markets in Thailand - to tease out the broader arguments and logics about how diverse enabling environments for technology and innovation may evolve and the wide range of public authorities that may be involved in providing governance and security for such innovation, beyond the state. The term ‘the rule of non-law’ refers to the breadth and array of rules, norms and systems that enable novel technological assemblages and uses. By looking at technologies and the rule of non-law in areas that are often seen as marginal or at the peripheries (from a profit and business perspective), the book reflects new insights back to more Western-dominated mainstream debates about law, technology, and innovation.

This book will be of great interest to students of Socio-Legal Studies, Science and Technology Studies, (Critical) Security Studies and International Relations.

List of Contributors

Acknowledgements

Chapter 1 Non-State Law and Technology: Theory and Themes

Section I: Tradition and Modernity

Chapter 2 Digitalising Traditions: Custom, Land, Biodiversity and Resource
Management in Vanuatu

Chapter 3 Tradition, Tussle, and Technology: the Khap Panchayats Guide to
Regulating Mobile Phones in India

Chapter 4 Crowdfarming in South Africa: Using Platform Technology to
Connect Tradition and Modernity

Section II: Borderlands

Chapter 5 The Regulation of Cross-border Trading of Mobile Phones in the
Ethio-Somaliland Corridor

Chapter 6 Ambivalent State Governance and Counter-governance: Migrants on the
Move in the France-UK Techno-borderscape

Chapter 7 Moderating Digital Communities in Hybrid Governance Contexts: The
Case of Refugees Digital Inclusion and Communication in Nairobi

Chapter 8 The Legal Geographies of Thailands Technology Markets

Part III: Challenges to the State

Chapter 9 Performative State building in the Digital World: ISIS and Monetary
Economics

Chapter 10 The Role of the Mobile Network Operators in Conflicting Governance
Systems: A Case Study of the Mobile Telecommunications Industry in
Afghanistan

Chapter 11 Informality and the Internet: Alternative Versions of
Technological Governance in Brazil

Part IV: Digital Spaces

Chapter 12 Decentralized Governance Opportunities in the Energy Sector:
Examples from Blockchain-based Initiatives

Chapter 13 Manufacturing Legitimacy: Content Moderation and the Absence of
the State

Chapter 14 Conclusions and Reflections on the Future of Technology and
Regulation in Areas of Limited Statehood

Index
Nicole Stremlau is the Head of the Programme in Comparative Media Law and Policy at the University of Oxfords Centre for Socio-Legal Studies and Research Professor in the School of Communications at the University of Johannesburg.

Clara Voyvodic Casabó is a Lecturer in Peace Studies and International Development in the Department of Peace and International Development, University of Bradford.