The book 'Digital governance : confronting the challenges posed by artificial intelligence', with contributions from Professors and PhD candidates at Erasmus University Rotterdam, is currently fully available as an eBook for students, researchers, and staff at Erasmus University.
Please follow the link in our catalogue to gain access to the full eBook: https://eur.on.worldcat.org/oclc/1481785118
Part I, chapters 2-7, provides several examples of disruptive effects of AI.
Part II, chapters 3-13, showcases the issues with designing legal solutions.
Download and use:
The book can be downloaded in its entirety for personal use and study.
Chapters 2, 6, 10, and 13 are available under a CC BY 4.0-license, which means that you can also share these chapters freely with friends and colleagues, and reuse them yourself.
All other chapters are not available under this Open Access-license, so you cannot share these freely, nor reuse them.
The Max Planck Encyclopedias of International Law are now open to everyone under a subscribe to open model (s2o).
https://opil.ouplaw.com/home/MPIL
From the 1st of April 2025 until the end of March 2026, this resource will remain open and, depending on the renewal by subscribers, this will be extended by another year.
What is the s20-model?
The s2o model is an access model under which a publisher will make a work or resource publicly available, provided enough subscribers renew they subscription.
In a way, the subscribers are responsible for paying for the open availability of the resource; if enough subscribers renew, then the resource remains 'publicly available'.
On the other hand, the resource will return to ‘publicly not-available’ if too many subscribers fail to renew their subscription. ‘Leeching’ is therefore not rewarded.
What are the Max Planck Encyclopedias of International Law?
These are actually 2 enclyclopedias;
- Max Planck Encyclopedia of Public International Law
- Max Planck Encyclopedia of International Procedural Law
The first resource is a long-time trusted and influential reference work on international law, highly recommended when researchers want to read up on a new topic.
The second resource is quite new, launched in 2019, focusing on international procedural law.
Have a look :)