This multidisciplinary collection provides expert analyses on the state of global trade law in the era of Big Data and AI. It explores all areas of international economic law and includes multiple country and stakeholder perspectives. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.
This collection explores the relevance of global trade law for data, big data and cross-border data flows. Contributing authors from different disciplines including law, economics and political science analyze developments at the World Trade Organization and in preferential trade venues by asking what future-oriented models for data governance are available and viable in the area of trade law and policy. The collection paints the broad picture of the interaction between digital technologies and trade regulation as well as provides in-depth analyses of critical to the data-driven economy issues, such as privacy and AI, and different countries' perspectives. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.
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'This timely book is essential reading for all intrigued by the great transition from analogue to digital trade rules. The collection and its authors take stock of rule-making in major jurisdictions, preferential trade agreements and current work at the World Trade Organization. It offers prospects for regulating Big Data and Artificial Intelligence in services and intellectual property, taking into account the protection of human rights and of data protection in the process of global norm diffusion. Challenges and prospects are ably mapped. The book will assist scholars and policy-makers in harnessing digitalization in coming years.' Thomas Cottier, Word Trade Institute, University of Bern 'Mira Burri has assembled a team of experts to produce the leading collection on big data and trade law. The real value in this collection comes from the rich and deep level of legal and policy analysis which questions the status quo and may provide for a major re-thinking of domestic and international norms on data governance. This collection is a must read for those seeking thoughtful reflection and forward thinking on contemporary issues relating to big data and trade law.' Bryan Mercurio, Simon F. S. Li Professor of Law, The Chinese University of Hong Kong 'One of the critical challenges of our time is the governance of Big Data in a world of cross-border data flows, data walls, and data breaches. This book brings together leaders in the field from around the world to address how trade law might be reimagined in this brave new world.' Gregory Shaffer, Chancellor's Professor, University of California, Irvine School of Law
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An exploration of the current state of global trade law in the era of Big Data and AI. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.
Big data and global trade law: An introduction Mira Burri; Part I.
Global Trade Law and Policy in the Age of Big Data:
1. Data flows and global
trade law Mira Burri;
2. Data flow-related provisions in preferential trade
agreements: trends and patterns of diffusion Manfred Elsig and Sebastian
Klotz;
3. The costs of data protectionism Martina F. Ferracane;
4. WTO law
and cross-border data flows: an unfinished agenda Andrew D. Mitchell and Neha
Mishra; Part II. From E-commerce to Big Data and AI: Emerging Issues in
Global Trade Law:
5. Artificial intelligence and trade Anupam Chander;
6.
Blockchain's practical and legal implications for global trade and global
trade law Emmanuelle Ganne;
7. TRIPS meets big data Daniel J. Gervais;
8. Big
data, AI and border enforcement of intellectual property rights: impact on
trade flows Xavier Seuba; Part IV. Safeguarding Privacy and Other Users'
Rights in the Age of Big Data:
9. Futuring digital privacy: reimaging the
law/tech interplay Urs Gasser;
10. The algorithmic learning deficit:
artificial intelligence, data protection, and trade Svetlana Yakovleva and
Joris van Hoboken;
11. Panta Rhei: a European perspective on ensuring a
high-level of protection of human rights in a world in which everything flows
Kristina Irion; Part IV. Global Perspectives on Digital Trade Governance:
12.
Data regulation with Chinese characteristics Henry S. Gao;
13. Regulatory
convergence of data rules in Latin America Rodrigo Polanco Lazo;
14.
Uploading CPTPP and USMCA provisions to the WTO's digital trade negotiations
poses challenges for national data regulation: example from Canada Patrick
Leblond;
15. Data ownership and data access rights: meaningful tools for
promoting the EU digital single market? Florent Thouvenin and Aurelia
Tamò-Larrieux;
16. Data is different, so policymakers should pay close
attention to its governance Susan A. Aaronson.
Mira Burri is a senior lecturer at the University of Lucerne and the principal investigator of the research project 'The Governance of Big Data in Trade Agreements.' For more than a decade now, she has worked in the area of digital trade law, publishing a number of key studies and advising governments, the European Parliament and NGOs on the topic.