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Research Handbook on Digital Regulatory Agencies

Edited by: Martha Garcia-Murillo, Ian MacInnes, Roslyn Layton

ISBN13: 9781035330881
To be Published: April 2026
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Limited
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £215.00





This multidisciplinary Research Handbook surveys digital regulation, examining responses to changing digital technologies that are reshaping economies and societies. Expert contributing authors address foundational questions about regulating digital platforms, balancing innovation with risk, and adapting traditional regulatory models to the distinct traits of the digital economy.

Drawing on international case studies, the Research Handbook addresses the complex challenges faced by governments and the debate around the role they should play in guiding digital development for public benefit and safety. Chapters cover key topics such as broadband access, AI oversight, cybersecurity, cloud infrastructure, satellites, and health data governance. The contributing authors emphasize the need for flexible, context-sensitive, and cooperative governance structures that safeguard privacy, competition, and democratic values in an increasingly interconnected world.

This Research Handbook is a vital resource for students, academics, and researchers in technology regulation and governance, economics, politics, public administration, and sociology. It is also a valuable resource for policymakers, regulators, and practitioners involved in telecommunications and information policy seeking informed strategies for governing rapidly evolving technologies.

Subjects:
IT, Internet and Artificial Intelligence Law
Contents:
1. Introduction to the Research Handbook on Digital Regulatory Agencies 1
Martha Garcia-Murillo and Ian MacInnes

PART I THE ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIES OF A DIGITAL REGULATORY AGENCY
2. On the need for digital regulators 8
Cary Coglianese
3. A poor case for a “digital platform agency” 28
Lawrence J. Spiwak
4. Key functions of a digital regulatory agency 42
Mark MacCarthy
5. Economic challenges for competition policy and regulation in digital markets 65
Mark A. Jamison

PART II REGULATION OF SPECIFIC DIGITAL AREAS
6. Broadband network cost recovery: a global comparison of models 82
Roslyn Layton
7. Policy landscape: understanding the framework of IP interconnection in South Korea 98
Dae Keun Cho
8. IXPs and the telecommunications regulator: comparing approaches from Russia, Brazil, and the US 118
Patricia A. Vargas León
9. A new frontier for AI use: the case of Latin America and Cloud data 134
Silvia Elaluf-Calderwood
10. Jurisdiction questions and coordination failures in space law and policy 154
Robert Frieden
11. EU and US cybersecurity institutions 173
Morten Falch, Anders Hansen Henten and Iwona Maria Windekilde
12. The European Health Data Space Board: challenges, opportunities, and expectations 191
Susana Navas Navarro

PART III COUNTRY-LEVEL DIGITAL REGULATORY AGENCIES
13. New Zealand’s digital landscape: paving the way for effective AI regulation? 213
Bronwyn Howell
14. Japan’s uniqueness on rulemaking of AI: an alternative for US and EU approaches 234
Toshiya Jitsuzumi
15. The prospects for a digital regulator in South Africa 253
Petrus Potgieter
16. Building the framework for digital governance in Peru 267
Roxana Barrantes and Piero Fernández-Dávila

PART IV INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION OF DIGITAL REGULATORY AGENCIES
17. The impact of US–China competition on AI governance 291
Joshua P. Meltzer
18. Future landscape for digital regulation in the Caribbean 309
Kwesi L. Prescod
19. Primary functions of digital agencies in Austria and Europe 330
Georg Serentschy
20. UN member states and the ITU: challenges and opportunities for digital regulation, spectrum coordination, and space communications 346
Mohamed El-Moghazi and Abdelmohsen Sheha
21. Understanding digital regulation and governance 365
Martha Garcia-Murillo, Roslyn Layton and Ian MacInnes