Barbarians in Our Midst: 'Cultural Diversity' on the Transnational Internet

28 Pages Posted: 10 Feb 2015

See all articles by Uta Kohl

Uta Kohl

University of Southampton; CUHK Law

Date Written: February 28, 2014

Abstract

Much has been written on jurisdictional problems arising out of the transnationality of the internet in various legal fields. This article approaches this jurisprudence from an angle that emphasises the underlying substance of the concerns - by joining it with the quite separate discourse on 'cultural diversity' in the age of globalisation. The discussion comes partly as a response to those who believe that legal harmonisation is, or would be, impracticalities aside, the Holy Grail to many online regulatory problems. It is not. At the same time, the retention of 'cultural diversity' and its implicit endorsement by States in the face of the 'threat' of online globality is not unproblematic either. The article charts ostensibly very disparate legal subject areas and jurisprudential concerns to construct a narrative on how pre-internet incidents of globalisation (i.e. trade liberalisations in the EU and under the WTO as well as the creation of universal human rights) that triggered the emergence of 'cultural diversity' as a distinct value protected by various legal concepts and regimes, are continued and discontinued by the full-on online confrontation with 'Otherness'. Using child protection as a case study, because it brings to the fore substantial cultural and legal divergence even amongst European States, the discussion documents how States have responded to the online clashes with their distinct law spaces and the serious legitimacy concerns to which these responses are giving rise. The arguments extend to most other legal subject-matter challenged by online transnationality (e.g. various areas of criminal law, but also data protection or defamation law and even commercial areas such as copyright law).

Keywords: internet, jurisdiction, cultural diversity, the Other, children

JEL Classification: K00, K30

Suggested Citation

Kohl, Uta, Barbarians in Our Midst: 'Cultural Diversity' on the Transnational Internet (February 28, 2014). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2562074 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2562074

Uta Kohl (Contact Author)

University of Southampton ( email )

University Rd.
Southampton SO17 1BJ, Hampshire SO17 1LP
United Kingdom

CUHK Law ( email )

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