CALL FOR PAPERS

The interaction between humans and technologies cannot be ignored. Computer networks and systems and, mainly, the internet have an essential role in the nowadays society, facilitating the movement of products, services and persons. At the same time, using new technologies in the most various fields led to major changes in everyone’s lives, offering to humanity a new perspective in the day to day life, educational process, interpersonal relationships, relationships with administrative bodies and public institutions, trade, as well as regarding the work of different categories of professionals. There are areas where no activity can be carried on without the help of the new technologies or where important mutations happened, such as the creation of cryptocurrency which broke down the currency monopoly of the states, with consequences which are difficult to evaluate.

One does not refer only to the information technology but also to other areas where science and technology lead to major changes, such as medicine or agronomy. The genetic modified organisms (GMO), cloning and other such achievements rise serious ethical problems, generating debates on a global scale.

In this context the risk of using computer networks, digital data, and new technologies in general, in manners that break the legal norms and with the purpose of committing criminal offences imposes the need of an efficient legislation.

Furthermore, the rapid development of artificial intelligence (AI) entitles us to believe that it will play a major role in all the fields of activity, including the justice system, a state of facts that creates an unprecedented challenge for the legal system.

            Carrying out all kinds of activities with the help of new technologies, preventing cybercrime, protecting the fundamental human rights, intellectual property rights, require the creation of national and international legal frameworks able to keep up with the latest developments in science and technology.

            The conference proposes an analysis of the efficiency of legal norms racing along the fulminant evolution of new technologies.

Proposed topics on the subject are: Human rights in the digital era; GDPR; Artificial intelligence in the justice system; Artificial intelligence in administration; Digital signature; Automation of fiscal reporting and fiscal control; Digitalization of fiscal administration; Standard Audit File for Tax (SAF-T) ANAF – SPV automation; Geo-blocking in the e-commerce sector; Consumers’ digital rights; Unfair trade practices of professionals in the e-commerce sector; Consumers’ vulnerability in the digital environment; Cybercrime; Preventing and combating money laundering and terrorism financing in cyberspace; B2C Business to Consumer e-commerce, B2B Business-to-Business e-commerce; Professionals in the digital era; Intellectual property right in cyberspace; Virtual currency.

These are only some of the themes we propose, without limiting the topics on the subject.

Important deadlines

Submission (registration form and abstract, maximum 300 words in English)

March 20,2020

Notification of acceptance

March 27, 2020 

Paper submission and registration fee

April 15, 2020

The Conference Proceedings will be published in FIAT IUSTITIA (-link), journal indexed in EBSCO (-link), CEEOL (-link) and RePEc (-link)  databases, if accepted after the peer-review process has been completed.

Registration is possible only using the registration form on (-link).

All papers must respect the Author guidelines (-link) and must be submitted electronically to the e-mail address: law.cantemir@gmail.com

After the peer-review process, the paper will be submitted to the e-mail address: journal.fiat.iustitia@gmail.com

An author may submit only one paper as a single author.

Authors are invited to submit a second article for issue No. 2/2020 of the journal Fiat Iustitia.