Part I Conceptual Approaches to Human Rights and Digital Technology1. Human Rights Futures for the Internet2. There Are No Rights ‘in’ Cyberspace3. Beyond national security, the emergence of a digital reason of state(s) led by transnational Guilds of Sensitive Information. The case of the Five Eyes Plus Network4. Digital Copyright and Human Rights: Balancing of Competing Obligations, or Is There No Conflict?Part II Security and Human Rights: Between Cybersecurity and Cybercrime5. Cybersecurity and Human Rights6. Cybercrime, Human Rights and Digital Politics 7. “This is Not a Drill”: International Law and Protection of Cybersecurity8. First Do No Harm: The Potential of Harm Caused to Fundamental Rights and Freedoms by State Cybersecurity interventionsPart III Internet Access and Surveillance: Assessing Human Rights in Practice9. Access to the Internet in the EU: a Policy Priority, a Fundamental, a Human Right, or a Concern of eGovernment? 10. Reflections on Access to Internet in Cuba as a Human Right11. Surveillance Reform: Revealing Surveillance Harm and Engaging Reform Tactics12. Germany’s Recent Intelligence Reform revisited: A Wolf in Sheep’s clothing?Part IV Automation, Trade and Freedom of Expression: Embedding Rights in Technology Governance 13. Liability and Automation in Socio-Technical Systems14. Who pays? - On Artificial Agents, Human Rights and Tort Law15. Digital Technologies, Human Rights and Global Trade? Expanding export controls of surveillance technologies in Europe, China and India 16. Policing ‘online-radicalization’: The framing of Europol’s Internet Referral UnitPart V Actors’ Perspectives on Human Rights: How Can Change Happen?17. When Private Actors Govern Human Rights18. International Organizations and Digital Human Rights19. Recognizing Children’s Rights in Relation to Digital Technologies: Challenges of Voice and Evidence, Principle and Practice20. Digital Rights of LGBTI Communities: A Roadmap for a Dual Human Rights FrameworkIndex