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Although the subject of children's rights and the sociology of
childhood and child sexual abuse has been the subject of extensive
scholarly deliberation and commentary, there has been very little
consideration of the way networks and digital information create a
trust deficit, which consequently implicates all non-State actors
and civil society. There is a need to understand the dynamics of
the multi-stakeholder Internet governance model and the challenges
Web 2.0 technologies pose for child protection policy-making. This
book fills the lacuna. "Online Child Safety: Law, Technology and
Governance "directs its focus on the governance challenges raised
by the problems of ascertaining the integrity, authenticity and
reliability of information flows and network infrastructures for
our attitudes towards risks facing children and strategies for
enhancing their safety in the online environment. It also seeks to
understand the nature of convergence and articulates the
significance of emerging regulatory trends in the way compliance
with child safety norms are defined, communicated and enforced.
During the last decade in particular the levels of critical
engagement with the challenges posed for privacy by the new
technologies have been on the rise. Many scholars have continued to
explore the big themes in a manner which typifies the complex
interplay between privacy, identity, security and surveillance.
This level of engagement is both welcome and timely, particularly
in a climate of growing public mistrust of State surveillance
activities and business predisposition to monetize information
relating to the online activities of users. This volume is informed
by the range of discussions currently conducted at scholarly and
policy levels. The essays illustrate the value of viewing privacy
concerns not only in terms of the means by which information is
communicated but also in terms of the political processes that are
inevitably engaged and the institutional, regulatory and cultural
contexts within which meanings regarding identity and security are
constituted.
This work explores the growing convergence between youth culture
and digital communication technologies and the corresponding
challenges posed to policymakers, examining the current governance
debate on online child safety.
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