Reading list of articles and books
This is a list of the articles that have been produced by the investigators on this project around the topics of digital sovereignty, data, semiconductor manufacture, cybersecurity, and AI.
All articles here are available under Gold Open Access, under a CC BY 4.0 license
Book:
Farrand, B. Geopolitical Union: Europe’s Attempt to Take Back Control of Technology Regulation (Cambridge University Press, 2026)
Articles:
Turobov A, Carrapico H, Farrand B. Opening the Black Box of EU Digital Sovereignty: A Macro-Level Analysis of the Concept's Development. Governance 2026, 39(2), e70112.
Farrand B. Fake Activity Markets as Hybrid Threat Vector: Implications for EU Social and Cyber Resilience. European Journal of Risk Regulation 2026, epub ahead of print.
Farrand B. The Economy–Security Nexus: Risk, Strategic Autonomy and the Regulation of the Semiconductor Supply Chain. European Journal of Risk Regulation 2025, 16(Special Issue 1), 279-293.
Carrapico H, Farrand B. EU Data Sovereignty: An Autonomy–Interdependence Governance Gap?. Politics & Governance 2025, 13, 10331.
Farrand B. Co-regulating principles for system safety: Agency by design. Computer Law & Security Review 2025, 59, 106224.
Farrand B, Carrapico H, Turobov A. The new geopolitics of EU cybersecurity: security, economy and sovereignty. International Affairs 2024, 100(6), 2379-2397.
Farrand B. Regulating misleading political advertising on online platforms: an example of regulatory mercantilism in digital policy. Policy Studies 2024, 45(5), 730-749.
Carrapico H, Farrand B. Cybersecurity Trends in the European Union: Regulatory Mercantilism and Digitalisation of Geopolitics. Journal of Common Market Studies 2024, 62(S1), 147-158.
Farrand B, Carrapico H. Digital Sovereignty and Taking Back Control: From Regulatory Capitalism to Regulatory Mercantilism in EU Cybersecurity. European Security 2022, 31(3), 435-453.
Carrapico H, Farrand B. When Trust Fades, Facebook Is No Longer a Friend: Shifting Privatisation Dynamics in the Context of Cybersecurity as a Result of Disinformation, Populism and Political Uncertainty. Journal of Common Market Studies 2021, 59(5), 1160-1176.