TY - BOOK AU - Koukiadis,Dimitrios TI - Reconstituting internet normativity: the role of State, private actors, global online community in the production of legal norms T2 - Frankfurter Studien zum Datenschutz SN - 9781509913213 AV - K564.C6 K68 2015 PY - 2015/// CY - Baden-Baden, Oxford PB - Nomos, Hart Publishing KW - Data transmission systems KW - Law and legislation KW - Internet KW - International cooperation KW - Normativity (Ethics) KW - Privacy, Right of KW - Law N1 - Originally presented as author's thesis (doctoral)--Wolfgang Goethe Universität, 2014; Includes bibliographical references (pages 353-378); Also issued in print; Electronic reproduction; London; Bloomsbury Publishing; 2017; Available via World Wide Web; Access limited by licensing agreement N2 - Can we have legitimate internet law without State institutions and authorities? What principles and criteria should be taken into consideration in producing internet's legal rules? Who should be the author of internet's normativity? Principles such as the "Rule of Law", Representation, Legitimacy, Transparency, Accountability do not seem any more to play an important role in producing online rules and norms, and fundamental rights such as protection of personality, personal data protection, informational self-determination have acquired a lesser importance in the internet environment. Instead, concepts such as "Lex Digitalis", "Transnationalisation of Law", "Global law without the State", have obtained the leading role in the internet regulation debate and in a perspective meta-Statal legal order. Different legal regimes created on the principles of self-regulation, decentralization, heterarchical social peripheries have corroded the understanding of Law and Constitution as an "Entity". Can such a legal order be viable, coherent, and legitimate? UR - https://doi.org/10.5040/9781509913213?locatt=label:secondary_bloomsburyCollections ER -