Conclusion. Introduction -- Part I -- European digital sovereignty, data protections, and the push toward data localization / 1. Two visions for data governance : territorial vs. functional sovereignty / Theodore Christakis -- 2. A starting point for re-thinking 'Sovereignty' for the online environment / Dan Svantesson -- 3. Digital sovereignty as double-edged sword / Anupam Chander and Haochen Sun -- 4. From data subjects to data sovereigns : addressing the limits of data privacy in the digital era / Anne SY Cheung -- Part II -- Technology and economic institutions -- 5. Digital sovereignty + artificial intelligence / Andrew Keane Woods -- 6. Taobao, federalism, and the emergence of law, Chinese style / Lizhi Liu & Barry R. Weingast -- 7. Levelling the playing field between sharing platforms and industry incumbents : good regulatory practices? / Shin-yi Peng -- 8. The emergence of financial data governance and the challenge of financial data sovereignty / Giuliano G. Castellano, Eriks K. Selga, and Douglas W. Arner -- Part III -- Trade regulation -- 9. Data sovereignty and trade agreements : three digital kingdoms / Henry Gao -- 10. Data governance and digital trade in India : losing sight of the forest for the trees? / Neha Mishra -- 11. Creating data flow rules through preferential trade agreements / Mira Burri -- Part IV -- Data localization -- 12. Personal data localisation and sovereignty along Asia's new silk roads / Graham Greenleaf -- 13. Lessons from internet shutdowns jurisprudence for data localization / Kyung Sin Park -- 14. European digital sovereignty, data protections, and the push toward data localization / Theodore Christakis -- Conclusion.
Summary:
"The internet was supposed to end sovereignty. "Governments of the Industrial World, you weary giants of flesh and steel, you have no sovereignty where we gather," John Perry Barlow famously declared. Sovereignty would prove impossible over a world of bits, with the internet simply routing around futile controls. But reports of the death of sovereignty over the internet proved premature. Consider recent events"-- Provided by publisher.
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