Part I: Introduction by the Editors
Law, Regulation, and Technology: the Field, Frame, and Focal Questions, Roger Brownsword, Eloise Scotford, Karen Yeung
Part II
1:Law, Liberty, and Technology, Roger Brownsword
2:Equality: Old Debates, New Technologies, Jeanne Snelling and John McMillan
3:Liberal Democractic Regulation and Technological Advance, Tom Sorell and John Guelke
4:Identity, Thomas Baldwin
5:The Common Good, Donna Dickenson
6:Law, Responsibility, and the Sciences of the Brain/Mind, Stephen Morse
7:Human Dignity and the Ethics and Regulation of Technology, Marcus Duwell
8:Human Rights and Human Tissue: the Case of Sperm as Property, Morag Goodwin
Part III
9:Legal Evolution in Response to Technological Change, Gregory Mandel
10:Law and Technology in Civil Judicial Procedures, Antonio Cordella and Francesca Contini
11:Conflict of Laws and the Internet, Uta Kohl
12:Technology and the American Constitution, O. Carter Snead and Stephanie Maloney
13:Contract Law and the Challenges of Computer Technology, Stephen Waddams
14:Criminal Law and the Evolving Technological Understanding of Behaviour, Lisa Claydon
15:Imagining Technology and Environment Law, Elizabeth Fisher
16:From Improvement towards Enhancement: A Regenesis of Environmental Law at the Dawn of the Anthropocene, Han Somsen
17:Parental Responsibility: Hyper-parenting and the Role of Technology, Jonathan Herring
18:Human Rights and Information Technologies, Giovanni Sartor
19:The Co-Existence of Copyright and Patent Laws to Protect Innovation: A Case Study of 3D Printing in UK and Australian Law, Dinusha Mendis, Phoebe Li, Diane Nicol, and Jane Nielsen
20:Regulating Workplace Technology: Extending the Agenda, Tonia Novitz
21:Public International Law and the Regulation of Emerging Technologies, Rosemary Rayfuse
22:Torts and Technology, Jonathan Morgan
23:Tax Law and Technology Change, Arthur Cockfield
Part IV
Section A: Regulating New Technologies
24:Regulating in the Face of Sociotechnical Change, Lyria Bennett-Moses
25:Hacking Metaphors in the Anticipatory Governance of Emerging Technology: The Case of Regulating Robots, Meg Leta-Jones and Jason Millar
26:The Legal Institutionalization of Public Participation in the EU Governance of Technology, Maria Lee
27:Precaution in the Governance of Technology, Andrew Stirling
28:The Role of Non-state Actors and Institutions in the Governance of New and Emerging Digital Technologies, Andrew Murray and Mark Leiser
Section B: Technology as Regulation
29:Automated Justice?Technology, Crime, and Social Control, Amber Marks, Benjamin Bowling, and Colman Keenan
30:Surveillance Theory and Its Implications for Law, Tjerk Timan, Masa Galic, and Bert-Jaap Koops
31:Hardwiring Privacy, Lee. A. Bygrave
32:Data Mining as Global Governance, Fleur Johns
33:Climate Engineering, Law, and Regulation, Jesse L. Reynolds
34:Are Biomedical Interventions Legitimate Regulatory Instruments?, Karen Yeung
35:Challenges from the Future of Human Enhancement, Nicholas Agar
36:Race and Law in the Genomic Age: A Problem for Equal Treatment Under the Law, Robin Bradley Kar, John Lindo
Part V: Six Key Policy Spheres
Section A: Medicine
37:New Technologies, Old Attitudes, and Legislative Rigidity, John Harris, David Lawrence
38:Transcending the Myth of Law's Stifling Technological Innovation - How Adaptive Drug Licensing Processes are Maintaining Legitimate Regulatory Connections, Barbel Dorbeck-Jung
Section B: Population, Reproduction, and Family
39:Human Rights in Technological Times, Therese Murphy
40:Population, Reproduction, and Family, Sheila A. M. McLean
41:Reproductive Technologies and the Search for Regulatory Legitimacy: Fuzzy Lines, Decaying Consensus, and Intractable Normative Problems, Colin Gavaghan
Section C: Trade, Commerce, and Employment
42:Technology and the Law of International Trade Regulation, Thomas Cottier
43:Trade, Commerce, and Employment: The Evolution of the Form and Regulation of the Employment Relationship in Response to the New Information Technology, Kenneth G. Dau-Schmidt
Section D: Public Safety and Security
44:Crime, Security, and Information Communication Technologies: The Changing Cybersecurity Threat Landscape and Implications for Regulation and Policing, David S. Wall
45:Debating Autonomous Weapon Systems, Their Ethics, and Their Regulation Under International Law, Kenneth Anderson, Matthew C. Waxman
46:Genetic Engineering and Biological Risks: Policy Formation and Regulatory Response, Filippa Lentzos
Section E: Communications, Information, Media, and Culture
47:Audience Constructions, Reputations, and Emerging Media Technologies: New Issues of Legal and Social Policy, Nora A Draper, Joseph Turow
Section F: Energy, Environment, Food, and Water
48:Water, Energy, and Technology: The Legal Challenges of Interdependencies and Technological Limits, Robin Kundis Craig
49:Technology Wags the Law: How Technological Solutions Changed the Perception of Environmental Harm and Law, Victor B. Flatt
50:Novel Foods and Risk Assessment in Europe: Separating Science from Society, Robert Lee
51:Carbon Capture and Storage, Richard Macrory
52:Nuisance Law, Regulation and the Invention of Prototypical Pollution Abatement Technology: 'Voluntarism' in Common Law and Regulation, Benjamin Pontin