Hacking the law: an analysis of internet-based campaigning on digital rights in the European Union

Digital rights activism constitutes an exemplary case of how internet affordances can be mobilised to engender political change. The values and principles stemming from the hacker imaginaire, and free and open source software practices, underpin digital rights activism, which uses the internet as a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Breindl, Yana
Other Authors: Heinderyckx, François
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:fr
Published: Universite Libre de Bruxelles 2011
Subjects:
TIC
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2013/ULB-DIPOT:oai:dipot.ulb.ac.be:2013/209836
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spelling ndltd-ulb.ac.be-oai-dipot.ulb.ac.be-2013-2098362018-04-11T17:34:11Z info:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesis info:ulb-repo/semantics/doctoralThesis info:ulb-repo/semantics/openurl/vlink-dissertation Hacking the law: an analysis of internet-based campaigning on digital rights in the European Union Hacker la loi: analyse de campagnes d'influence assistées par internet autour des droits numériques dans l'Union européenne Breindl, Yana Heinderyckx, François Peeters, Christian Francq, Pascal Di Jorio, Irene Kavada, Anastasia Frère, Marie-Soleil Universite Libre de Bruxelles Université libre de Bruxelles, Faculté de Philosophie et Lettres – Sciences de l'information et de la communication, Bruxelles 2011-10-22 fr Digital rights activism constitutes an exemplary case of how internet affordances can be mobilised to engender political change. The values and principles stemming from the hacker imaginaire, and free and open source software practices, underpin digital rights activism, which uses the internet as a tool, object and platform for the protection of rights in the digital realm. The analysis focuses on how digital rights activists use and adapt the political affordances of the internet to intervene in European Union policy-making. Two original case studies of internet-based campaigning at the European level (the “No Software Patents” and the “Telecoms package” campaigns) provide in-depth insight into the campaigning processes and their impact upon parliamentary politics. The cases highlight the complementarity of online and offline collective action, by examining processes of open collaboration, information disclosure and internet-assisted lobbying. The success of the “Telecoms package” campaign is then assessed, along with the perspective of the targets: members and staff of the European Parliament.<p><p>The belief in values of freedom, decentralisation, openness, creativity and progress inspires a particular type of activism, which promotes autonomy, participation and efficiency. The empirical evidence suggests that this set of principles can, at times, conflict with practices observed in the field. This has to do with the particular opportunity structure of the European Union and the characteristics of the movement. The EU favours functional integration of civil society actors who are expected to contribute technical and/or legal expertise. This configuration challenges internet-based protest networks that rely on highly independent and fluctuating engagement, and suffer from a lack of diversity and cohesion. The internet does not solve all obstacles to collective action. It provides, however, a networked infrastructure and tools for organising, coordinating and campaigning. Online and offline actions are not only supportive of each other. Internet-based campaigning can be successful once it reaches out beyond the internet, and penetrates the corridors of political institutions.<p> Sciences humaines Information et communication Internet -- Political aspects -- Europe Political participation -- Technological innovations -- Europe Internet -- Law and legislation -- Europe Computer hackers -- Europe Internet -- Aspect politique -- Europe Participation politique -- Innovations -- Europe Internet -- Droit -- Europe Pirates informatiques -- Europe civil society / campagne d'influence action collective neutralité du net Union européenne société civile Campaigning political activism collective action propriété intellectuelle TIC internet activisme politique European Union net neutrality intellectual property rights ICTs 1 v. (522 p.) Doctorat en Information et communication info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished local/bictel.ulb.ac.be:ULBetd-11032011-132148 local/ulbcat.ulb.ac.be:934616 http://hdl.handle.net/2013/ULB-DIPOT:oai:dipot.ulb.ac.be:2013/209836 No full-text files
collection NDLTD
language fr
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Sciences humaines
Information et communication
Internet -- Political aspects -- Europe
Political participation -- Technological innovations -- Europe
Internet -- Law and legislation -- Europe
Computer hackers -- Europe
Internet -- Aspect politique -- Europe
Participation politique -- Innovations -- Europe
Internet -- Droit -- Europe
Pirates informatiques -- Europe
civil society / campagne d'influence
action collective
neutralité du net
Union européenne
société civile
Campaigning
political activism
collective action
propriété intellectuelle
TIC
internet
activisme politique
European Union
net neutrality
intellectual property rights
ICTs
spellingShingle Sciences humaines
Information et communication
Internet -- Political aspects -- Europe
Political participation -- Technological innovations -- Europe
Internet -- Law and legislation -- Europe
Computer hackers -- Europe
Internet -- Aspect politique -- Europe
Participation politique -- Innovations -- Europe
Internet -- Droit -- Europe
Pirates informatiques -- Europe
civil society / campagne d'influence
action collective
neutralité du net
Union européenne
société civile
Campaigning
political activism
collective action
propriété intellectuelle
TIC
internet
activisme politique
European Union
net neutrality
intellectual property rights
ICTs
Breindl, Yana
Hacking the law: an analysis of internet-based campaigning on digital rights in the European Union
description Digital rights activism constitutes an exemplary case of how internet affordances can be mobilised to engender political change. The values and principles stemming from the hacker imaginaire, and free and open source software practices, underpin digital rights activism, which uses the internet as a tool, object and platform for the protection of rights in the digital realm. The analysis focuses on how digital rights activists use and adapt the political affordances of the internet to intervene in European Union policy-making. Two original case studies of internet-based campaigning at the European level (the “No Software Patents” and the “Telecoms package” campaigns) provide in-depth insight into the campaigning processes and their impact upon parliamentary politics. The cases highlight the complementarity of online and offline collective action, by examining processes of open collaboration, information disclosure and internet-assisted lobbying. The success of the “Telecoms package” campaign is then assessed, along with the perspective of the targets: members and staff of the European Parliament.<p><p>The belief in values of freedom, decentralisation, openness, creativity and progress inspires a particular type of activism, which promotes autonomy, participation and efficiency. The empirical evidence suggests that this set of principles can, at times, conflict with practices observed in the field. This has to do with the particular opportunity structure of the European Union and the characteristics of the movement. The EU favours functional integration of civil society actors who are expected to contribute technical and/or legal expertise. This configuration challenges internet-based protest networks that rely on highly independent and fluctuating engagement, and suffer from a lack of diversity and cohesion. The internet does not solve all obstacles to collective action. It provides, however, a networked infrastructure and tools for organising, coordinating and campaigning. Online and offline actions are not only supportive of each other. Internet-based campaigning can be successful once it reaches out beyond the internet, and penetrates the corridors of political institutions.<p> === Doctorat en Information et communication === info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
author2 Heinderyckx, François
author_facet Heinderyckx, François
Breindl, Yana
author Breindl, Yana
author_sort Breindl, Yana
title Hacking the law: an analysis of internet-based campaigning on digital rights in the European Union
title_short Hacking the law: an analysis of internet-based campaigning on digital rights in the European Union
title_full Hacking the law: an analysis of internet-based campaigning on digital rights in the European Union
title_fullStr Hacking the law: an analysis of internet-based campaigning on digital rights in the European Union
title_full_unstemmed Hacking the law: an analysis of internet-based campaigning on digital rights in the European Union
title_sort hacking the law: an analysis of internet-based campaigning on digital rights in the european union
publisher Universite Libre de Bruxelles
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2013/ULB-DIPOT:oai:dipot.ulb.ac.be:2013/209836
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