Cyber-Systemics, Systemic Governance and Disruption of the Criminal Law

Dublin Core

Title

Cyber-Systemics, Systemic Governance and Disruption of the Criminal Law

Description

Criminal law regulators face difficulties in adapting to technological change. They must often operate in environments of significant uncertainty, with changing policy aims and legislative provisions that fail to ‘move with the times’. Rather than engaging with robust, let alone radical theoretical examination of their actions and structure, regulatory organisations struggle to enforce laws in communities affected by technological or systemic change, often leading to claims of overcriminalisation, inadequacy, regulatory overreach or inconsistency. This article suggests that dealing with disruptive criminality solely through legal instruments is a policy failure. Instead, a radical new framework is proposed, embedded in cybernetics (a transdiscplinary approach to exploring regulatory systems). Such a framework — systemic governance — offers a substantially altered way of managing regulatory relationships that resists disruptive change and challenges regulators to find new ways of engaging with the population they seek to influence.

Creator

Walker-Munro, Brendan

Source

The University of Queensland Law Journal; Vol. 39 No. 2 (2020): The University of Queensland Law Journal; 225-252
1839-289X
0083-4041

Publisher

The University of Queensland School of Law

Date

2020-08-19

Rights

Copyright (c) 2020 The University of Queensland Law Journal

Relation

Format

application/pdf

Language

eng

Type

info:eu-repo/semantics/article
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Peer-reviewed Article

Identifier

Citation

Walker-Munro, Brendan, Cyber-Systemics, Systemic Governance and Disruption of the Criminal Law, The University of Queensland School of Law, 2020, accessed November 6, 2024, https://igi.indrastra.com/items/show/2636

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