Digitalisation and climate change have sparked, on their own, two enormously disruptive processes: the digital and the green transitions, often referred to as the “twins” transitions.
- Date
- Friday 27 Sep 2024, 09:00 - 17:00
- Type
- Symposium
- Spoken Language
- English
- Location
Q-lounge, Q-Building, Erasmus University Rottterdam
- More information
Contact Information
For inquiries and submission of abstracts, please contact the organising committee at sectorplan@law.eur.nl.
Organising Committee
Dr. Enrique Santamaría Echeverría (Erasmus School of Law) and Dr. Chiara Angiolini (University of Siena)
We look forward to your contributions!
At the EU level, these two transitions have been accompanied by hectic legislative activity. On the digitalisation side, recent (proposals for) regulations include the Digital Markets Act, the Digital Service Act, the Data Governance Act, the Data Act, the Artificial Intelligence Act, and the proposal for Common European Data Spaces. This expansive regulatory turn arguably responds to the demands, challenges, and opportunities that digitalisation presents, for example in terms of competitiveness and economic growth. Data, in particular, which was initially regulated from a privacy and data protection perspective (most notably the General Data Protection Regulation), is now the subject of several regulatory measures and proposals to boost economic growth through data sharing, quality data (pools), interoperability, and cybersecurity.
On the side of the green transition, new legislative instruments have been recently adopted (e.g., European Climate Law). The need to protect the environment and face climate change is leading legislators, scholars, and courts to consider and (re-)assess the activities of private actors under the lenses of environmental law (e.g., the proposal for a Directive on Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence, the decision of the Court of the Hague, 26 May 2021, Shell, under appeal, and the pending case Greenpeace Italy et. Al. v. ENI S.p.A. et al.).
Against this backdrop, the workshop aims at exploring the interplay between the different bodies of the law enabling these twin transitions, with a particular focus on the following three overarching questions:
- The relation between the legal underpinning and normative foundations of both transitions: is it possible to reconcile the paradigms of growth embedded in the digital transition with those of environmental protection and sustainability supporting the green transition? Or are the two logics behind them simply too different to complement each other?
- The growing importance of data in the economy poses the question of the environmental impact of data processing activities. Is the current framework of data law and governance sufficiently equipped to deal with this problem, or do we need a new (theoretical) framework that accounts for the benefits and harms arising from the environmental impact of digital technologies, in general, and data, more specifically?
- At the EU level, several proposals have been advanced to use data-driven technologies to enhance the capacity to understand and solve environmental challenges (e.g. in the Green New Deal and the prospective Common European Green Deal Data Space). What are the opportunities, challenges and pitfalls of using digital and data-driven technologies to address the environmental problems of our time?
We welcome submissions (max. 500 words, excluding footnotes and bibliographical references) using all types of approaches and methodologies exploring any of the foregoing questions.
Programme
Download the full programme here.
Publication Opportunity
Selected papers will be invited for a post-conference publication project. Details will be shared during the event.
Registration
Attendance is free but registration is necessary for catering purposes. Please register in the form below.
Important Dates
- Abstract Submission Deadline: [May 31, 2024]
- Notification of Acceptance: [June 15, 2024]
- Paper submission [September 10, 2024]
- Workshop Date: 27 of September