University of Ottawa Press
Citizenship in a Connected Canada
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Author / Editor information
Jane Bailey (Contributor)
Jane Bailey is a Full Professor in the Common Law Section (English), who teaches cyberfeminism, technoprudence, contracts and civil procedure. Her research focuses on the impact of evolving technology on equality, privacy, freedom of expression and multiculturalism, as well as the societal and cultural impact of the Internet and emerging forms of private technological control, particularly in relation to members of socially disadvantaged communities. She has spoken, written and published on a variety of topics, including:
cyberbullying and cyberviolence
sexting
internet hate propaganda
copyright and freedom of expression
online child pornography
women's e-quality
privacy
webcamming
Jacquelyn Burkell (Contributor)
Professor Jacquelyn Burkell is Associate Professor at the Faculty of Information and Media Studies at the University of Western Ontario, and Associate Member of the University of Ottawa Centre for Law, Technology and Society, at the University of Ottawa.
One of her main teaching areas is research methods, both at the graduate (MLIS) and undergraduate (MIT) levels. Her approach in these courses is to teach students to give them the skills to be active consumers as well as producers of empirical research. She also teaches undergraduate and graduate courses in human-computer interface design, along with undergraduate courses examining the social aspects of computing and the impact of information presentation on interpretation and use.
Teresa Scassa (Contributor)
Teresa Scassa is the Canada Research Chair in Information Law and Policy at the University of Ottawa, Faculty of Law. She is the author or co-author of several books, including Digital Commerce in Canada (LexisNexis, 2020), Canadian Trademark Law (2nd edition, LexisNexis, 2015), and Law Beyond Borders (Irwin Law, 2014). She is co-editor of Artificial Intelligence and the Law in Canada (LexisNexis, 2021) and Law and the Sharing Economy (University of Ottawa Press, 2018). She is a member of the Canadian Advisory Council on Artificial Intelligence and of the Geothink research partnership. She has written widely in the areas of intellectual property law, law and technology, and privacy.
Elizabeth Dubois (Editor)
Elizabeth Dubois is Associate Professor in the Department of Communication and a faculty member of the Centre for Law, Technology and Society at the University of Ottawa.
Florian Martin-Bariteau (Editor)
Florian Martin-Bariteau is Associate Professor, the University Research Chair in Technology and Society, and the Director of the Centre for Law, Technology and Society at the University of Ottawa.
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Frontmatter
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Table of Contents
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Preface
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INTRODUCTION Citizenship in a Connected Canada
1 - PART I BUILDING AN INCLUSIVE SOCIETY IN A DIGITAL CONTEXT
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CHAPTER 1 Decolonizing Digital Spaces
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CHAPTER 2 Telling a Different Story: Canadian Citizens and Their Democracy in the Digital Age
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CHAPTER 3 Framing the Challenges of Digital Inclusion for Young Canadians
57 - PART II BUILDING DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTIONS IN A DIGITAL CONTEXT
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CHAPTER 4 Government in the Connected Era
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CHAPTER 5 Data Governance: The Next Frontier of Digital Government Research and Practice
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CHAPTER 6 The Conversation Canada: Not-for-Profit Journalism in a Time of Commercial Media Decline
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CHAPTER 7 Influencing the Internet: Lobbyists and Interest Groups’ Impact on Digital Rights in Canada
135 - PART III RETHINKING LEGAL FRAMEWORKS FOR THE DIGITAL CONTEXT
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CHAPTER 8 Consumers First, Digital Citizenry Second: Through the Gateway of Standard-Form Contracts
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CHAPTER 9 A Human Rights-Based Approach to Data Protection in Canada
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CHAPTER 10 Making Sense of the Canadian Digital Tax Debate
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CHAPTER 11 Online Abuse, Chilling Effects, and Human Rights
207 - CONCLUSION
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Next Steps for a Connected Canada
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Contributors
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Index
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Law, Technology, and Media
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