DIGITAL GOVERNANCE AND LEGAL RIGHTS: A STUDY UNDER CONSTITUTIONAL JURISPRUDENCE
Sairee Ghosh, 5 YR B.A. LL.B. (Calcutta University), LL.M. (Pursuing) (Vidyasagar University) (India)
Waves of technical innovation in recent decades have greatly enhanced people’s quality of life. In the meantime, complaints about technological inequities have grown, including unequal economic distribution and racial discrimination. Experts have warned that emerging technology, such as Artificial Intelligence, might have disastrous consequences, predicting that it could spark World War III. Utilization of the internet has skyrocketed due to technological advancements, particularly after the COVID-19 pandemic, which compelled people to stay indoors. The epidemic has expedited the digital revolution. Due to restrictions on physical mobility worldwide during the pandemic, all major businesses, including education, migrated to the internet, paving the path for complete digitization. Recognizing the importance of the internet and advocating for universal access to it constitutes an urgent necessity. The courts have also highlighted the importance of the internet during the pandemic, and they have begun hearings via video conference, paving the path for the establishment of a new category of fundamental rights in the form of the right to access the internet. The legislature must recognize the importance of the internet and fulfill its obligations as a democratic government to reduce the digital gap and ensure that internet access is not restricted arbitrarily, since it is a fundamental human right. This article proposes an idea regarding a new basic Right to Technology that should be included in the Indian Constitution. Considering the vital relevance of technology to human dignity and equality, a new Constitutional Right seeks to encourage equitable sharing of technical advantages while also preventing harmful technological uses. The article begins with a discussion of the Fundamental Rights outlined in the Constitution. It then addresses the Impact of Technology on Fundamental Rights. This article discusses challenges that individuals deal with in India. It also investigates solutions for protecting the Right to Technology.
| 📄 Type | 🔍 Information |
|---|---|
| Research Paper | LawFoyer International Journal of Doctrinal Legal Research (LIJDLR), Volume 3, Issue 4, Page 1375–1393. |
| 🔗 Creative Commons | © Copyright |
| This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License . | © Authors, 2025. All rights reserved. |