Constitutionalism as a Way to Decolonize Global Data Law Development

Data governance is being explored across all possible avenues, ranging from domestic laws, private standards to international treaties. Amidst this din, there are also constitutional contributions at different points of time with the potential to lay down the first principles for future adjudicatio...

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Main Author: Anushka Mittal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: openjournals.nl 2024-03-01
Series:Technology and Regulation
Subjects:
Online Access:https://techreg.org/article/view/12854
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author Anushka Mittal
author_facet Anushka Mittal
author_sort Anushka Mittal
collection DOAJ
description Data governance is being explored across all possible avenues, ranging from domestic laws, private standards to international treaties. Amidst this din, there are also constitutional contributions at different points of time with the potential to lay down the first principles for future adjudication and law making. This article analyses the legal histories of constitutions and landmark decisions related to public biometric use in India and South Africa to identify decolonial specificities. Global governance of data has the potential to spiral into international law making with states as the unit, without acknowledging the power differentials that exist within a state. It is time that the plurality of interests within nations are accommodated in the development of technology, as the architecture of the future. For the same, the article identifies global constitutionalism as the means through which any discussion of a global data law should be approached, taking into account the decolonial consensus in post-colonial states and its contemporary use in technological debates.
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spelling doaj.art-6363ec520bf948baafde4941690a473e2024-03-18T11:24:16Zengopenjournals.nlTechnology and Regulation2666-139X2024-03-01202410.26116/techreg.2024.003Constitutionalism as a Way to Decolonize Global Data Law DevelopmentAnushka Mittal0PhD Candidate, University of Amsterdam Data governance is being explored across all possible avenues, ranging from domestic laws, private standards to international treaties. Amidst this din, there are also constitutional contributions at different points of time with the potential to lay down the first principles for future adjudication and law making. This article analyses the legal histories of constitutions and landmark decisions related to public biometric use in India and South Africa to identify decolonial specificities. Global governance of data has the potential to spiral into international law making with states as the unit, without acknowledging the power differentials that exist within a state. It is time that the plurality of interests within nations are accommodated in the development of technology, as the architecture of the future. For the same, the article identifies global constitutionalism as the means through which any discussion of a global data law should be approached, taking into account the decolonial consensus in post-colonial states and its contemporary use in technological debates. https://techreg.org/article/view/12854decolonialconstitutionbiometricIndiaSouth Africapower differential
spellingShingle Anushka Mittal
Constitutionalism as a Way to Decolonize Global Data Law Development
Technology and Regulation
decolonial
constitution
biometric
India
South Africa
power differential
title Constitutionalism as a Way to Decolonize Global Data Law Development
title_full Constitutionalism as a Way to Decolonize Global Data Law Development
title_fullStr Constitutionalism as a Way to Decolonize Global Data Law Development
title_full_unstemmed Constitutionalism as a Way to Decolonize Global Data Law Development
title_short Constitutionalism as a Way to Decolonize Global Data Law Development
title_sort constitutionalism as a way to decolonize global data law development
topic decolonial
constitution
biometric
India
South Africa
power differential
url https://techreg.org/article/view/12854
work_keys_str_mv AT anushkamittal constitutionalismasawaytodecolonizeglobaldatalawdevelopment