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espace at MMU > Faculties > Faculty of Humanities, Law and Social Science > Department of Information and Communications > The internet and public–private governance in the European Union

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2173/71695
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Title: The internet and public–private governance in the European Union
Authors: Christou, George
Simpson, Seamus
Citation: Journal of public policy, 2006, vol. 26, no. 1, pp. 43-61
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Issue date: 2006
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2173/71695
DOI: 10.1017/S0143814X06000419
Additional Links: http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayJournal?jid=PUP
Abstract: The EU plays a significant role in public policy aspects of Internet governance, having created in the late 1990s the dot eu Internet Top Level Domain (TLD). This enables users to register names under a European online address label. This paper explores key public policy issues in the emergent governance system for dot eu, because it provides an interesting case of new European transnational private governance. Specifically, dot eu governance is a reconciliation resulting from a governance cultural clash between the European regulatory state and what can be described broadly as the Internet community. The EU has customised the governance of dot eu towards a public–private dispersed agencification model. The paper extends the evidence base on agencification within trans-European regulatory networks and the emergence of private transnational network governance characterised by self-regulation.
Type: Article
Language: en
Description: Full-text of this article is not available in this e-prints service. This article was originally published following peer-review in Journal of Public Policy, published by and copyright Cambridge University Press.
ISSN: 0143-814X
EISSN: 1469-7815
Appears in collections:Department of Information and Communications
CERLIM: The Centre for Research in Library and Information Management

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