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Law (general

Law (general

Jan. 2022 9781108835343 Hardback GBP 69.99 / USD 89.99 eISBN 9781108883719

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Monitoring Laws

Profiling and identity in the world State Jake Goldenfein | Cornell University, New York Traces the history of government profiling, the effects of contemporary technologies on surveillance practices, and how the law protects individuals by protecting ‘identity’. Goldenfein’s analysis of emerging legal protections for contemporary technological environments makes this ideal for anyone interested in how computation is changing society and governance.

198pp Mar. 2022 9781108445337 Paperback GBP 21.99 / USD 32.99 Oct. 2019 9781108426626 Hardback GBP 88.99 / USD 116 eISBN 9781108637657

The Cambridge Handbook of Artificial Intelligence

Global Perspectives on Law and ethics Larry A. DiMatteo | University of Florida The most comprehensive and systematic study of the impact of AI on private law, this volume uses an interdisciplinary and comparative approaches. It is timely, as various organizations and nations are drafting regulations, guidelines, and principles to address the use of AI in a wide range of areas.

Cambridge Law Handbooks

400pp Aug. 2022 9781316512807 Hardback GBP 145 / USD 190 eISBN 9781009072168

The Cambridge Handbook of Responsible Artificial Intelligence

interdisciplinary Perspectives Silja Voeneky | Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg, Germany There is an urgent need for responsible governance of Artificial Intelligence systems. This Handbook maps important features of responsible AI governance and demonstrates how to achieve and implement them at the regional, national and international level.

Cambridge Law Handbooks

500pp Nov. 2022 9781009207867 Hardback GBP 150 / USD 195 eISBN 9781009207898

The Right to Repair

reclaiming the Things we Own Aaron Perzanowski | Case Western Reserve University, Ohio Companies design their products, business models, and marketing strategies to stop us from repairing the devices we own. In doing so, they extract untold billions of dollars from consumers, stifle competition, and inflict massive damage on the planet. This book explains how we can harness the power of law to regain control over technology.

364pp Feb. 2022 9781108837651 Hardback GBP 14.99 / USD 19.95 eISBN 9781108946926

Vaccines as Technology

innovation, barriers, and the Public Health Ana Santos Rutschman | Villanova University, Pennsylvania Since the pandemic, we have all become more aware of the mechanisms of vaccine development and distribution, and interested in how it could be improved. This book explains the legal and policy issues for a non-specialist readership, covering key problems in vaccine regulation, patents, technology transfer, and international relations.

250pp Apr. 2022 9781009125765 Paperback GBP 22.99 / USD 29.99 Apr. 2022 9781009123396 Hardback GBP 64.99 / USD 84.99 eISBN 9781009129169

Legal history

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Making Commercial Law Through Practice 1830–1970

Ross Cranston | London School of Economics and Political Science This history of English commercial law draws on archival research. It gives the lawyer and law student background to current commercial law, furnishes historians with an explanation of commercial law and practice relevant to international trade, manufacturing and finance, and adds a new dimension to the history of British commerce.

Law in Context

527pp Aug. 2022 9781316648377 Paperback GBP 29.99 / USD 44.99 May. 2021 9781107198890 Hardback GBP 85 / USD 110 eISBN 9781108182836

The Cambridge Legal history of Australia

Peter Cane | University of Cambridge Exploring encounters of laws, people and place in Australia since 1788, this ground-breaking volume traces the development of the Australian legal system and its interactions with the laws and legal cultures of Indigenous Peoples. It will be invaluable to students, teachers and researchers in law, history, politics and cultural studies.

814pp Aug. 2022 9781108499224 Hardback GBP 120 / USD 155 eISBN 9781108633949

The Inns of Court under Elizabeth I and the Early Stuarts

1590–1640 Second edition Wilfrid R. Prest | University of Adelaide Under Elizabeth I and the early Stuarts, London’s four inns of court were both professional associations of practising lawyers, and liberal academies for laymen, so directly involved in the cultural, political, religious, and social ferment of the age. This is a revised and updated new edition of a classic work.

Cambridge Studies in English Legal history

234pp Jan. 2023 9781108845380 Hardback GBP 85 / USD 110 eISBN 9781108955737

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