Titre : | Protecting children in the digital era. The use of alternative regulatory instruments | Type de document : | texte imprimé | Auteurs : | Eva Lievens, Auteur | Editeur : | Leiden [The Netherlands] : Martinus Nijhoff | Année de publication : | 2010 | Collection : | International Studies in Human Rights num. 105 | Importance : | xiv, 584 p. | ISBN/ISSN/EAN : | 978-90-04-18477-0 | Prix : | 111,50-€ | Langues : | Français | Catégories : | DROIT : Droit européen : Internet MEDIAS:AUDIOVISUEL:NUMERIQUE:Contenu:protection des mineurs
| Tags : | internet Europe législation numérique protection des mineurs droit des médias régulation liberté d'expression concurrence | Index. décimale : | 343.099 Droit - Communication, information, presse | Résumé : |
Présentation de l'éditeur :
"From the mid-1990s onwards concerns regarding the exposure of children to harmful content in the increasingly digital media environment intensified. Soon thereafter policy makers across Europe realised that alternative regulatory instruments, such as self- and co-regulation, might be more appropriate than traditional legislation to address this matter of public interest. Taking the complex and delicate nature of protecting minors into account, this book provides an in-depth legal analysis of the alternative regulatory instruments that can be used to regulate content in the digital era, with particular attention to the protection of fundamental rights, such as freedom of expression, privacy and procedural guarantees, internal market regulation, competition rules, and implementation requirements. "
(Quatrième de couverture) | Note de contenu : |
PART I
Chapter I : Setting : notions, issues & policy history
1.1. Clarification of the constitutive elements
- Digital media content
- Minor
- Harmful content
1.2. Protecting minors against harmful digital media content : identifying the regulatory challenges
- Introduction
- Characteristics of the new information and communication networks
- Obstacles to the use of traditional (content) regulation in the digital media environment
- The United States legislative approach to protect minors on the Internet
- The need of a broader regulatory framework
- EU policy history : the protection of minors against harmful digital media content
1.3 Conclusion
Chapter II : Alternative regulatory instruments
2.1 Regulation
2.2 “Alternative regulation” in policy documents
- General policy documents
- Media policy documents
2.3 Overview and analysis of different alternative regulatory instruments
- Alternative regulatory instruments
- Self-regulation
- Co-regulation
- Self- and co-regulation : interim conclusion
- Regulatory tools : technology
- Regulatory tools : supporting mechanisms
2.4. Conclusion
Alternative regulatory instruments
Legal framework ('de lege lata')
Using ARIs to protect minors from harmful content : compliance with the legal framework
The legal framework.
PART II
Chapter I : Legal framework
- 1.1 Introduction
- 1.2 Human Rights – Children’s rights
- 1.3 Human Rights – freedom of expression, privacy and procedural guarantees
- 1.4 Content regulation
- 1.5 Internal market and competition
- 1.6 General EU legislative principles and requirements
- 1.7 Conclusion
Chapter 2 : Using ARIs to protect minors from harmful content : compliance with the legal framework
- 2.1 Introduction
- 2.2 Evaluation of different alternative regulatory instruments : compliance with the legal framework
• 2.2.1 Human rights
• 2.2.2 Internal market legislation
• 2.2.3 Cmpetition rules
• 2.2.4 Article 288 para. 3 TFEU [ex 249 EC Treaty]
- Conclusion : ARIs and their compatibility with the European legal framework
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Protecting children in the digital era. The use of alternative regulatory instruments [texte imprimé] / Eva Lievens, Auteur . - Leiden (Koninklijke Brill NV, The Netherlands) : Martinus Nijhoff, 2010 . - xiv, 584 p.. - ( International Studies in Human Rights; 105) . ISBN : 978-90-04-18477-0 : 111,50-€ Langues : Français Catégories : | DROIT : Droit européen : Internet MEDIAS:AUDIOVISUEL:NUMERIQUE:Contenu:protection des mineurs
| Tags : | internet Europe législation numérique protection des mineurs droit des médias régulation liberté d'expression concurrence | Index. décimale : | 343.099 Droit - Communication, information, presse | Résumé : |
Présentation de l'éditeur :
"From the mid-1990s onwards concerns regarding the exposure of children to harmful content in the increasingly digital media environment intensified. Soon thereafter policy makers across Europe realised that alternative regulatory instruments, such as self- and co-regulation, might be more appropriate than traditional legislation to address this matter of public interest. Taking the complex and delicate nature of protecting minors into account, this book provides an in-depth legal analysis of the alternative regulatory instruments that can be used to regulate content in the digital era, with particular attention to the protection of fundamental rights, such as freedom of expression, privacy and procedural guarantees, internal market regulation, competition rules, and implementation requirements. "
(Quatrième de couverture) | Note de contenu : |
PART I
Chapter I : Setting : notions, issues & policy history
1.1. Clarification of the constitutive elements
- Digital media content
- Minor
- Harmful content
1.2. Protecting minors against harmful digital media content : identifying the regulatory challenges
- Introduction
- Characteristics of the new information and communication networks
- Obstacles to the use of traditional (content) regulation in the digital media environment
- The United States legislative approach to protect minors on the Internet
- The need of a broader regulatory framework
- EU policy history : the protection of minors against harmful digital media content
1.3 Conclusion
Chapter II : Alternative regulatory instruments
2.1 Regulation
2.2 “Alternative regulation” in policy documents
- General policy documents
- Media policy documents
2.3 Overview and analysis of different alternative regulatory instruments
- Alternative regulatory instruments
- Self-regulation
- Co-regulation
- Self- and co-regulation : interim conclusion
- Regulatory tools : technology
- Regulatory tools : supporting mechanisms
2.4. Conclusion
Alternative regulatory instruments
Legal framework ('de lege lata')
Using ARIs to protect minors from harmful content : compliance with the legal framework
The legal framework.
PART II
Chapter I : Legal framework
- 1.1 Introduction
- 1.2 Human Rights – Children’s rights
- 1.3 Human Rights – freedom of expression, privacy and procedural guarantees
- 1.4 Content regulation
- 1.5 Internal market and competition
- 1.6 General EU legislative principles and requirements
- 1.7 Conclusion
Chapter 2 : Using ARIs to protect minors from harmful content : compliance with the legal framework
- 2.1 Introduction
- 2.2 Evaluation of different alternative regulatory instruments : compliance with the legal framework
• 2.2.1 Human rights
• 2.2.2 Internal market legislation
• 2.2.3 Cmpetition rules
• 2.2.4 Article 288 para. 3 TFEU [ex 249 EC Treaty]
- Conclusion : ARIs and their compatibility with the European legal framework
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