civilian-affairs-commitee-reports-special-report-of-the-subcommittee-on-the-free-flow-of-information-and-people-human-rights-in-turkey-nov-1984-22-pp

1992 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rowland Lorimer ◽  
Eleanor O'Donnell

Abstract: The motive force behind the global production and distribution of media products is to be found in a translation of basic human rights into free flow of information doctrine and a variety of associated legal and policy provisions. The workings of these mechanisms can be seen in the form of evolving publishing activities in Eastern Europe. On the other hand, a subdominant trend towards international exchange of culturally distinctive work can also be defined and found in Eastern Europe. Both trends have implications for Canadian publishers. Résumé: On peut trouver la force motrice derrière la production globale et la distribution des produits médiatiques dans un traduction des droits fondamentaux de la personne en une doctrine de la libre circulation de l'information et dans une variété de dispositions légales et de politiques associées. On peut observer l'action de ces mécanismes dans l'évolution des activités de l'édition en Europe de l'Est. Par ailleurs, on peut également définir et trouver en Europe de l'Est une tendance sous-dominante vers l'échange d'oeuvres culturellement distinctes. Les deux tendances ont des implications pour les éditeurs canadiens.


2015 ◽  
Vol 14 (04) ◽  
pp. 671-700 ◽  
Author(s):  
SUSAN AARONSON

AbstractHerein, we examine how the United States and the European Union use trade agreements to advance the free flow of information and to promote digital rights online. In the 1980s and 1990s, after US policymakers tried to include language governing the free flow of information in trade agreements, other nations feared a threat to their sovereignty and their ability to restrict cross-border data flows in the interest of privacy or national security.In the twenty-first century, again many states have not responded positively to US and EU efforts to facilitate the free flow of information. They worry that the US dominates both the Internet economy and Internet governance in ways that benefit its interests. After the Snowden allegations, many states adopted strategies that restricted rather than enhanced the free flow of information. Without deliberate intent, efforts to set information free through trade liberalization may be making the Internet less free.Finally, the two trade giants are not fully in agreement on Internet freedom, but neither has linked policies to promote the free flow of information with policies to advance digital rights. Moreover, they do not agree as to when restrictions on information are necessary and when they are protectionist.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jie Huang

Insufficient WTO regulation of cross-border e-commerce confronts China and the US with three legal challenges: ambiguous classification of digital products, inadequate consumer and privacy protection, and weak protection of cross-border flow of information. China and the US have adopted converging approaches to address these challenges: inserting e-commerce chapters into their FTAs. However, the substance of these chapters is diverging. Firstly, US FTAs categorise digital products separately from goods and services and provide national treatment and most favoured nation treatment to products and their suppliers. China’s FTAs still offer no solutions to the classification of digital products and their treatment. Secondly, although China’s FTAs still provide weak protection for consumers and privacy, Chinese domestic law has converged towards US FTAs to provide better protection. Thirdly, US and China FTAs are significantly divergent in their regulation of the free flow of information. In the post-TPP era, a polycentric direction will emerge in the regulation of the free flow of information between China and the US.


Author(s):  
Ulrike Kozeluh

The emergence of new media has raised the hope of many politicians, citizens, political activists and scholars from various disciplines to establish a (virtual) space for free flow of information and communication for increasing the quality of democratic decision making.1


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