Science Fiction as Legal Imaginary
Herausgeber: Green, Alex; Tranter, Kieran; Travis, Mitchell
Science Fiction as Legal Imaginary
Herausgeber: Green, Alex; Tranter, Kieran; Travis, Mitchell
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This book examines how science fiction informs the legal imagination of technological futures.
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This book examines how science fiction informs the legal imagination of technological futures.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 366
- Erscheinungstermin: 21. November 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 24mm
- Gewicht: 713g
- ISBN-13: 9781032534374
- ISBN-10: 1032534370
- Artikelnr.: 71185244
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 366
- Erscheinungstermin: 21. November 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 24mm
- Gewicht: 713g
- ISBN-13: 9781032534374
- ISBN-10: 1032534370
- Artikelnr.: 71185244
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Alex Green is Senior Lecturer in Law at the University of York, UK. Mitchell Travis is Director of the Centre for Law and Social Justice at the University of Leeds, UK. Kieran Tranter is Chair of Law, Technology and Future at the School of Law, Queensland University of Technology, Australia.
1. The legal imaginary and science fiction Alex Green, Mitchell Travis and
Kieran Tranter Part I: Law of Space(s) 2. Towards an impossible polis:
Legal imagination and state continuity Alex Green 3. Playing Loki?
International law, decision-making and inter-temporality through the Marvel
multiverse Kritika Sharma 4. Life on the front line: The lives of child
soldiers in Neon Genesis Evangelion Emily Muir 5. Science fiction and
interstellar rights and institutions Erika Techera, Renae Barker and
Meredith Blake 6. International law in outer space: Protecting against
'evil' corporate actors Stacey Henderson and Melissa de Zwart 7. Society is
just people, and the law is just their club rules: What utopian science
fiction can teach us about legal vulnerability and exploitation in
off-world human settlements Evie Kendal Part II: Dealing with the Digital
8. Artificial intelligences and legal persons as rule of law subjects in
the lifecycle of software objects Paul Burgess and Daniel Chia Matallana
9. AI Capone, or the criminal masterminds of the future: The imagined
possibilities of malevolent artificial intelligence with an emphasis on
money laundering Georgios Pavlidis 10. Analysing the portrayal of AI and
the law-making process in science fiction: Yeliz Figen Döker and Habibe
Deniz Seval 11. Science fiction, science and fiction of and for algorithmic
agents in law AM Waltermann 12. Buying and selling the Metaverse: Science
fiction speculation, modern technologies and digital data economies Katie
Szilagyi and Christina Fawcett Part III: We are Borg: Imagining the
Corporate Form 13. Political theology, 1001 cars long: Emblems of corporate
sovereignty in Netflix's Snowpiercer Timothy D Peters and Thomas Giddens
14. The spatio-legality of corporate sovereignty in AppleTV+'s Severance
Dhiraj Nainani 15. Merging AI technology with the corporate form: Purpose,
personhood and data in 'Autofac' Jordan Aleksander Belor
Kieran Tranter Part I: Law of Space(s) 2. Towards an impossible polis:
Legal imagination and state continuity Alex Green 3. Playing Loki?
International law, decision-making and inter-temporality through the Marvel
multiverse Kritika Sharma 4. Life on the front line: The lives of child
soldiers in Neon Genesis Evangelion Emily Muir 5. Science fiction and
interstellar rights and institutions Erika Techera, Renae Barker and
Meredith Blake 6. International law in outer space: Protecting against
'evil' corporate actors Stacey Henderson and Melissa de Zwart 7. Society is
just people, and the law is just their club rules: What utopian science
fiction can teach us about legal vulnerability and exploitation in
off-world human settlements Evie Kendal Part II: Dealing with the Digital
8. Artificial intelligences and legal persons as rule of law subjects in
the lifecycle of software objects Paul Burgess and Daniel Chia Matallana
9. AI Capone, or the criminal masterminds of the future: The imagined
possibilities of malevolent artificial intelligence with an emphasis on
money laundering Georgios Pavlidis 10. Analysing the portrayal of AI and
the law-making process in science fiction: Yeliz Figen Döker and Habibe
Deniz Seval 11. Science fiction, science and fiction of and for algorithmic
agents in law AM Waltermann 12. Buying and selling the Metaverse: Science
fiction speculation, modern technologies and digital data economies Katie
Szilagyi and Christina Fawcett Part III: We are Borg: Imagining the
Corporate Form 13. Political theology, 1001 cars long: Emblems of corporate
sovereignty in Netflix's Snowpiercer Timothy D Peters and Thomas Giddens
14. The spatio-legality of corporate sovereignty in AppleTV+'s Severance
Dhiraj Nainani 15. Merging AI technology with the corporate form: Purpose,
personhood and data in 'Autofac' Jordan Aleksander Belor
1. The legal imaginary and science fiction Alex Green, Mitchell Travis and
Kieran Tranter Part I: Law of Space(s) 2. Towards an impossible polis:
Legal imagination and state continuity Alex Green 3. Playing Loki?
International law, decision-making and inter-temporality through the Marvel
multiverse Kritika Sharma 4. Life on the front line: The lives of child
soldiers in Neon Genesis Evangelion Emily Muir 5. Science fiction and
interstellar rights and institutions Erika Techera, Renae Barker and
Meredith Blake 6. International law in outer space: Protecting against
'evil' corporate actors Stacey Henderson and Melissa de Zwart 7. Society is
just people, and the law is just their club rules: What utopian science
fiction can teach us about legal vulnerability and exploitation in
off-world human settlements Evie Kendal Part II: Dealing with the Digital
8. Artificial intelligences and legal persons as rule of law subjects in
the lifecycle of software objects Paul Burgess and Daniel Chia Matallana
9. AI Capone, or the criminal masterminds of the future: The imagined
possibilities of malevolent artificial intelligence with an emphasis on
money laundering Georgios Pavlidis 10. Analysing the portrayal of AI and
the law-making process in science fiction: Yeliz Figen Döker and Habibe
Deniz Seval 11. Science fiction, science and fiction of and for algorithmic
agents in law AM Waltermann 12. Buying and selling the Metaverse: Science
fiction speculation, modern technologies and digital data economies Katie
Szilagyi and Christina Fawcett Part III: We are Borg: Imagining the
Corporate Form 13. Political theology, 1001 cars long: Emblems of corporate
sovereignty in Netflix's Snowpiercer Timothy D Peters and Thomas Giddens
14. The spatio-legality of corporate sovereignty in AppleTV+'s Severance
Dhiraj Nainani 15. Merging AI technology with the corporate form: Purpose,
personhood and data in 'Autofac' Jordan Aleksander Belor
Kieran Tranter Part I: Law of Space(s) 2. Towards an impossible polis:
Legal imagination and state continuity Alex Green 3. Playing Loki?
International law, decision-making and inter-temporality through the Marvel
multiverse Kritika Sharma 4. Life on the front line: The lives of child
soldiers in Neon Genesis Evangelion Emily Muir 5. Science fiction and
interstellar rights and institutions Erika Techera, Renae Barker and
Meredith Blake 6. International law in outer space: Protecting against
'evil' corporate actors Stacey Henderson and Melissa de Zwart 7. Society is
just people, and the law is just their club rules: What utopian science
fiction can teach us about legal vulnerability and exploitation in
off-world human settlements Evie Kendal Part II: Dealing with the Digital
8. Artificial intelligences and legal persons as rule of law subjects in
the lifecycle of software objects Paul Burgess and Daniel Chia Matallana
9. AI Capone, or the criminal masterminds of the future: The imagined
possibilities of malevolent artificial intelligence with an emphasis on
money laundering Georgios Pavlidis 10. Analysing the portrayal of AI and
the law-making process in science fiction: Yeliz Figen Döker and Habibe
Deniz Seval 11. Science fiction, science and fiction of and for algorithmic
agents in law AM Waltermann 12. Buying and selling the Metaverse: Science
fiction speculation, modern technologies and digital data economies Katie
Szilagyi and Christina Fawcett Part III: We are Borg: Imagining the
Corporate Form 13. Political theology, 1001 cars long: Emblems of corporate
sovereignty in Netflix's Snowpiercer Timothy D Peters and Thomas Giddens
14. The spatio-legality of corporate sovereignty in AppleTV+'s Severance
Dhiraj Nainani 15. Merging AI technology with the corporate form: Purpose,
personhood and data in 'Autofac' Jordan Aleksander Belor







