The policy battle over information and digital policy regulation: a canadian perspective
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Michael Geist
Abstract
Many countries find their information and digital policies still dominated by traditional stakeholders, particularly the content industry, major telecom companies, and marketing groups, yet Canada has experienced a notable shift in perspective with a strong and influential public interest voice. This shift toward public interest and participation in the development of Canadian information and digital policies has led to legislation, regulation, and policy outcomes that once seemed highly unlikely. This Article seeks to better understand the changing role of the public in Canadian information and digital policymaking by framing the developments as an ongoing policy development process featuring a series of closely linked changes and responses. The emergence of public participation on information and digital policy issues occurred across a spectrum of issues, yet the traits were strikingly similar: grassroots efforts reliant on social media and the Internet to capture media and public attention and focus it on consumer perspectives, minimal interest from government and regulators; and initial dismissal giving way to hostility from incumbent stakeholders. The Article identifies some of the reasons behind the shift, including the growing importance of information and digital policies, the impact of digital advocacy tools, and the shifting policy pyramid in which users have now largely leapfrogged corporate interests as policy influencers. While the shift does not mean the public interest wins on every issue, it does suggest an important change in influence with long-term ramifications for the development of information and digital policy in Canada that others may seek to emulate.
© 2016 by Theoretical Inquiries in Law
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Theoretical Inquiries in Law
- Research Article
- Introduction
- Research Article
- The regulatory state in the information age
- Research Article
- The policy battle over information and digital policy regulation: a canadian perspective
- Research Article
- Technological tattletales and constitutional black holes: communications intermediaries and constitutional constraints
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- Platform neutrality: enhancing freedom of expression in spheres of private power
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- Taking notice seriously: information delivery and consumer contract formation
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- Thoughts on techno-social engineering of humans and the freedom to be off (or free from such engineering)
- Research Article
- Freedom to tinker
- Research Article
- Technological neutrality: recalibrating copyright in the information age
- Research Article
- Intellectual property, antitrust, and the rule of law: between private power and state power
- Research Article
- Compounding errors: why heightened regulation and taxation are bad antidotes for recessions and income inequality
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Theoretical Inquiries in Law
- Research Article
- Introduction
- Research Article
- The regulatory state in the information age
- Research Article
- The policy battle over information and digital policy regulation: a canadian perspective
- Research Article
- Technological tattletales and constitutional black holes: communications intermediaries and constitutional constraints
- Research Article
- Platform neutrality: enhancing freedom of expression in spheres of private power
- Research Article
- Taking notice seriously: information delivery and consumer contract formation
- Research Article
- Thoughts on techno-social engineering of humans and the freedom to be off (or free from such engineering)
- Research Article
- Freedom to tinker
- Research Article
- Technological neutrality: recalibrating copyright in the information age
- Research Article
- Intellectual property, antitrust, and the rule of law: between private power and state power
- Research Article
- Compounding errors: why heightened regulation and taxation are bad antidotes for recessions and income inequality