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33.More information
The digital space — as multiple and hybridized with offline space — requires a specific cartographic approach. Mobilizing the notions of situated knowledges and sensitive diagrammatics, this study of Louise Drulhe's Critical Atlas of Internet (2012) demonstrates on the one hand how space affects the internets and their representations, and on the other hand, how the atlas turns out to be the most appropriate form to conceptualize the complexities of digital space.
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34.More information
Chapter 19 of CUSMA on digital trade is, among the preferential trade agreements (PTAs), the one that goes the furthest to liberalize digital trade between signatory countries. In fact, the United States, unlike the European Union and China, for example, sees the ACP as the best way to ensure the free flow of digital goods and services across borders while governing data flows that make these commercial transactions possible. Why did the United States choose to make these trade agreements the primary vehicle for governing digital trade and data flows with the rest of the world? And why has a partner like Canada accepted provisions within CUSMA that impose significant potential limits on the regulation of data and digital platforms? Using a political economy perspective, this article answers these questions.