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Content Type
publication
Title
Following the crowd literature support and the capabilities of autonomous research agents
External ID
321889
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Publisher
Geneva Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, Department of International Economics
Content Type
publication
Title
Eurobonds and the European debt trilemma
External ID
321890
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Publisher
Geneva Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, Department of International Economics
Content Type
publication
Title
Migration memories of sexual and reproductive health in late twentieth-century London
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Banner Gender Center
External ID
321838
Authors external
George J. SEVERS
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Content Type
publication
Title
Humanitarianism from below? universalism and the politics of inhumanity
External ID
321821
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Publisher
London UCL Press
Content Type
publication
Title
Introduction making transparency visible
External ID
321822
Authors external
Filipe CALVãO
Elizabeth Emma FERRY
Alex GOLUB
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Content Type
publication
Title
Nation
External ID
321824
Authors external
Jean-François BAYART
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Content Type
publication
Title
Goat humanity housing and Islamic aid in small-town Kyrgyzstan
External ID
321825
Authors external
Mukaram TOKTOGULOVA
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Content Type
publication
Title
Introduction a new politics of humanitarianism
External ID
321826
Authors external
Elimra MURATOVA
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Content Type
publication
Title
Raising the bar an inclusive global poverty line
External ID
321886
Authors external
Lant PRITCHETT
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Content Type
publication
Title
Digital persona and transnational regulation of cyberspace
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Banner Useful Informations Library
Editorial content

This chapter examines the geopolitical challenges of privacy regulation in the context of transnational data flows. It explores how global technology companies utilise cyberspace to monetise personal data, often bypassing national regulatory frameworks. The chapter highlights tensions between domestic privacy laws and international data exchange, emphasising conflicts over digital sovereignty. It discusses surveillance capitalism and tracking technologies, raising ethical concerns about user privacy. The concept of a "digital persona" is proposed as a framework for balancing regulation across jurisdictions. We argue for international cooperation to create interoperable privacy standards, integrating VPN-enabled jurisdictional "hopping". Ultimately, it calls for reimagining legal frameworks to integrate transnational and digital sovereignty perspectives for more sustainable, inclusive privacy regulation.

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