Title :
Parallel processing: the private creation of digital “law”
Author :
Connell, Brian M O
Author_Institution :
Central Connecticut State Univ., CT, USA
Abstract :
Recent scholarship-legal and otherwise-condemns traditional notions of government and adjudication as being antithetical to the “revolutionary” essence of digital technology. The viability of this position is examined, along with the characteristics of paradigms which are offered as appropriate. The paper concludes by considering what will be gained and lost if law is recast in a digital image and urges that a new dialogue should commence between those who construct the tools of data access and those charged with legal policy
Keywords :
government policies; information technology; legislation; adjudication; data access tools; dialogue; digital law; digital technology revolution; government; legal policy; legal scholarship; paradigms; private law creation; Digital images; Government; Humans; Immune system; Law; Legal factors; Parallel processing; Publishing; Scholarships; Space technology;
Conference_Titel :
Technology and Society, 1998. ISTAS 98. Wiring the World: The Impact of Information Technology on Society., Proceedings of the 1998 International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
South Bend, IN
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-4327-1
DOI :
10.1109/ISTAS.1998.689167