EU Legislative Approaches to the Regulation of Digitalisation
13 Pages Posted: 26 Jun 2024
Date Written: June 20, 2024
Abstract
This introductory article outlines three fundamental regulatory developments in the EU’s legislation addressing digitalization and automation of decision-making: One is that across many acts, we see a move towards more complex multi-level composite procedures, involving not only public structures with agencies, EU bodies, national agencies but also co-regulation through standardization in combination with – in several areas – audited self-regulation. A second feature of much of the current legislation in digital matters is that obligations imposed therein require increased attention to information management – from sourcing to use, dissemination, and sharing. This is a requirement for both public and private actors imposing ever more ‘granular’ knowledge and reporting of information flows on economic operators. A third is the growing role of interoperability, which is being firmly established as a tool to create data exchange possibilities. The diverse regulatory tools and methods create complex networks of legal relations and obligations that appear challenging to submit to oversight and compliance without strong protection of individual rights and procedural structures ensuring their enforcement.
Keywords: EU law, Regulation, Digitalization in the EU, Automation of decision-making, EU digital governance
JEL Classification: K23
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation