• Title/Summary/Keyword: Internet/digital bill of rights

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The New Social Contract and the Digital Bill of Rights : Focusing on Political and Social Context and Institutionalization (새로운 사회계약과 디지털 권리장전: 정치·사회적 맥락과 제도화를 중심으로)

  • Jo, Gye-Won
    • Informatization Policy
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    • v.31 no.1
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    • pp.53-71
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    • 2024
  • Digital transformation calls for a new social contract that must transform the existing norms and paradigms of our society. Digital constitutionalism is a way of building new order through a new social contract and is an ideology that aims to establish and ensure a normative framework for the protection of fundamental rights and balance of power in the digital environment. The Internet/Digital Bill of Rights is a representative example of constitutionalization based on this ideology. Initially, it took the form of an informal, non-binding declaration led by civil society organizations or various stakeholders, setting forth normative principles adapted to the changing nature of digital society. More recently, they have taken the form of formal charters, declarations, or laws containing principles at the national or regional level. The "Digital Bill of Rights" proposed by the Korean government can be seen as an example of this trend, but it does not fully reflect the recent trend of Internet/Digital Bills of Rights in terms of substantive and procedural legitimacy. Even if the government provides a certain normative direction, it needs to be combined with a concrete action plan in each area to create a balance of norms with digital technologies and industries instead of simply being a "declaration".