Cybersecurity and human rights in the age of cyberveillance / edited by Joanna Kulesza, Roy Balleste
Imprint
Lanham : Rowman & Littlefield, 2016
Descript
xvii, 230 pages ; 24 cm
CONTENT
Chapter 1: Defining Cybersecurity -Critical Infrastructure and Public-Private PartnershipsJoanna KuleszaChapter 2: Cybersecurity and State Responsibility: Identifying a Due Diligence Standard for Prevention of Transboundary ThreatsDimitrios DelibasisChapter 3: In Harm's Way: Harmonizing Security and Human Rights in the Internet AgeRoy BallesteChapter 4: Privacy vs. Security - Identifying the Challenges in a Global Information SocietyRolf H. Weber and Dominic N. StaigerChapter 5: Freedom of Expression, Human Rights Standardsand Private Online CensorshipMonica HortenChapter 6: (Global) Internet Governance and its DiscontentsM. I. FranklinChapter 7: Walled Gardens or a Global Network? Tensions, (De-)centralizations and Pluralities of the Internet ModelFrancesca MusianiChapter 8: National Security and US Constitutional Rights: The Road to SnowdenRichard B. AndresChapter 9: Attribution Policy in Cyber WarKalliopi Chainoglou