Signed into law in 2014, the Marco Civil da Internet (Brazilian Civil Rights Framework for the Internet) appeared to offer pioneering legislation for a digital bill of rights that addressed issues like network neutrality and privacy. Guy T. Hoskins chronicles the Marco Civil's development and its failure to confront the greatest concentration of power in the digital age: informational capitalism. Combining interviews with discourse and political-economic analysis, Hoskins reveals why the legislation fell short while examining the implications of its emergence in Brazil, which remains on the margins of the global system of informational capitalism. Hoskins places collectivist and public service principles at the core of any framework's effectiveness. He also shows why we must create systems sensitive to the sociocultural and political-economic contexts that will shape digital rights and their usefulness.
Compelling and contrarian, Digital Rights at the Periphery looks at communications policy and internet governance in the Global South and the lessons they provide for the rest of the world.
By:
Guy T. Hoskins Imprint: University of Illinois Press Country of Publication: United States Edition: New edition Dimensions:
Height: 229mm,
Width: 152mm,
Weight: 454g ISBN:9780252088773 ISBN 10: 0252088778 Series:Geopolitics of Information Pages: 288 Publication Date:08 July 2025 Audience:
Professional and scholarly
,
Undergraduate
Format:Paperback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming
Guy T. Hoskins is a postdoctoral fellow with the Global Media & Internet Concentration Project at Carleton University and a contract lecturer at Toronto Metropolitan University.