This contribution investigates how human rights in the digital age can be considered as an overall frame accommodating fundamental rights and freedoms that relate to communication processes, and related challenges, in societies worldwide. The article brings together different disciplinary backgrounds (communication studies, linguistics, and sociology of networks) and complementary empirical analyses conducted on the content, structure and relevance of evolving discourses concerning human rights in the digital age. In doing so, the article defines and adopts a constructivist and communicative approach to the study of world politics, and details its relevance in order to assess the evolution of normative standards concerning communication as a human right in the transnational context.

Investigating Evolving Discourses on Human Rights in The Digital Age: Emerging norms and policy challenges

PADOVANI, CLAUDIA;
2010

Abstract

This contribution investigates how human rights in the digital age can be considered as an overall frame accommodating fundamental rights and freedoms that relate to communication processes, and related challenges, in societies worldwide. The article brings together different disciplinary backgrounds (communication studies, linguistics, and sociology of networks) and complementary empirical analyses conducted on the content, structure and relevance of evolving discourses concerning human rights in the digital age. In doing so, the article defines and adopts a constructivist and communicative approach to the study of world politics, and details its relevance in order to assess the evolution of normative standards concerning communication as a human right in the transnational context.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11577/2426530
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