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About The Book
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<p>The Internet’s importance for freedom of expression and other rights comes in part from the ability it bestows on users to create and share information rather than just receive it. Within the context of existing freedom of expression guarantees this book critically evaluates the goal of bridging the 'digital divide' – the gap between those who have access to the Internet and those who do not. Central to this analysis is the examination of two questions: first is there a right to access the Internet and if so what does that right look like and how far does it extend? Second if there is a right to access the Internet is there a legal obligation on States to overcome the digital divide?<br><br>Through examination of this debate’s history analysis of case law in the European Court of Human Rights and Inter-American Court of Human Rights and a case study of one digital inclusion programme in Jalisco Mexico this book concludes that there is indeed currently a legal right to Internet access but one that it is very limited in scope. The 2012 Joint Declaration on Freedom of Expression and the Internet is aspirational in nature rather than a representative summary of current protections afforded by the international human rights legal framework. This book establishes a critical foundation from which some of these aspirations could be advanced in the future. The digital divide is not just a human rights challenge nor will it be overcome through human rights law alone. Nevertheless human rights law could and should do more than it has thus far.</p>