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"This book presents the most relevant experiences and best practices concerning the use and impact of ICTs in the courtroom"--Provided by publisher.
This book sheds new light on the potential application of EU law to situations arising outside EU territory, and its consequences. In today’s globalized world, EU law and the ECJ’s decisions have been calling for exceptions and defining new connecting elements that make the traditional approach of EU law, based on the territoriality principle, less straightforward. This is the case with e.g. the effects doctrine in the context of EU competition law, as was fully recognized after the ECJ’s Intel case. Moreover, recently approved rules concerning the EU’s internal market, EU environmental law and EU data protection law have made it more difficult to define the application of EU law in ...
The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic has had an undeniable impact on cybercrime. The initial crisis quickly became a global catastrophe with multiple consequences in economics, health, and political and social fields. This book explores how this global emergency has influenced cybercrime. Indeed, since feeding off new vulnerabilities, thanks to the effects of the pandemic crisis in various states around the world, cybercrime has increased and evolved. In 2020, the world was already dealing with numerous tensions and the effects of the global crisis have therefore only tended to exacerbate the issues that relate to cybercrime. For example, radicalization and identity theft has found an environment in which they thrive: the Internet. Criminals have been able to adapt their modus operandi, their targets and their attack vectors. However, on the plus side, the response of law enforcement and public authorities, in terms of the legal, policing and policy side of cybercrime, has also been adapted in order to better combat the increase in this phenomenon.
A l'appui d'un document inédit, l'Explication des tableaux et statues exposées dans l'hôtel de Sennecterre, un livret décrivant sur quatre pages cent soixante-et-onze numéros de peintures et quelques sculptures, l'auteur révèle l'un des grands événements artistiques du règne de Louis XIV, jusqu'alors oublié : une somptueuse exposition publique, organisée à Paris durant l'automne 1683. Cette exposition, la première de ce genre qui ait eu lieu en France, dresse un large panorama de la peinture européenne, réunissant tableaux anciens et contemporains. On y trouve les "classiques", Raphaël et les maîtres bolonais, des Carrache à l'Albane, les ...