10 12, 2024

Guest Blog Series on Preserving Public Values in The Automated State: Proportionality

Post 6 in the Guest Blog Series Preserving Public Values in The Automated State by Natalia Menéndez González and Spyros Syrrakos Proportionality successfully dominates modern democratic constitutionalism. We may live in an analogue ‘age of proportionality’, however, the unprecedented digital transformation upends its foundations, rendering the ‘private’ and ‘public’ boundaries porous. Primarily, private platforms assume a quasi-regulatory [...]

10 12, 2024

Guest Blog Series on Preserving Public Values in The Automated State: Public Services Lost in Digitalisation: Re-positioning Accountability

Post 5 in the Guest Blog Series Preserving Public Values in The Automated State by Deirdre Curtin and Anna Morandini Digitalisation intensifies public-private cooperation in a manner that is often at the expense of core public values. From local schools to federal ministries, public entities enlist private companies to engage in the carrying out of their public [...]

12 11, 2024

Guest Blog Series on Preserving Public Values in The Automated State: Digital Constitutionalism: What is it, what is at stake, and how is the current research distinct

Post 2 in the Guest Blog Series  Preserving Public Values in The Automated State by Giovanni De Gregorio, PLMJ Chair in Law and Technology, Católica Global School of Law, Universidade Católica Portuguesa, Lisbon and Oreste Pollicino, Full Professor of Constitutional Law, Bocconi University, Milan.  The spread of digital technologies has profoundly affected society, fundamentally altering how people live, work, [...]