
In our interconnected world, digital data turn into a central political issue. They are simultaneously important tools for security agencies, a valuable economic resource for businesses, and they have crucial relevance for individual's rights. As multiple actors extend claims of their legitimate control, conflicts emerge. Data Governance: Value Orders and Jurisdictional Conflicts argues that such conflicts about the collection, transfer, and sharing of digital data have an underestimated - and undertheorized - normative dimension. The book suggests that, while public and private actors are united by the assumption that the governance of data is meaningful in the pursuit of societal goals, they have conflicting visions of what it is precisely that data governance should achieve or avoid, and, in fact, what data actually are. The book offers an innovative conceptual and empirical framework - embedded in international political sociology - to analyse and assess overlapping claims of legitimate control over data. Five case studies provide an in-depth perspective on central conflicts between the major regulatory powers, the European Union, the United States, and private tech companies.Data Governance traces patterns of change and continuity in the disputes about the transatlantic commercial data agreements, counterterrorist data sharing in air travel and finance, law enforcement access to electronic evidence, and data removal under the right to be forgotten. It shows that the central normative questions at the heart of these conflicts remain remarkably stable over time. Actors are torn between competing goals of prioritizing security, economic progress, or individual rights, and they face choices between exercising their sovereignty and enabling global cooperation. As a growing number of countries adopt data governance provisions, this book offers a fresh perspective to capture the competing societal visions at play.
This book investigates the normative dimensions and jurisdictional conflicts inherent in the global governance of digital data. Author Anke Sophia Obendiek, drawing on international political sociology, argues that disputes over data collection and sharing are not merely technical or legal, but are rooted in fundamentally conflicting societal visions regarding the purpose of data. The text provides a conceptual framework to assess how public and private actors navigate competing priorities of security, economic utility, and individual rights.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts identify this work as a significant contribution to the field of international political sociology, particularly for its focus on the normative underpinnings of digital regulation. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is well-suited for scholars and policy analysts interested in the intersection of technology and sovereignty.
Page Count:
305
Publication Date:
2022-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0192697447
ISBN-13:
9780192697448
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