01504nam a22001097a 4500008004100000100003800041245011000079260003100189300003200220520111100252773003101363240328b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aMazur, Joanna and Włoch, Renata  aEmbedding digital economy: Fictitious triple movement in the European union's artificial intelligence act aSocial and Legal Studies  a33(1), Feb, 2024: p.104-123 aIn this article, we show how the European Union styles itself as the sole political actor able to effectively protect its citizens from the threats engendered by new technologies while balancing the relations between digital markets and the member states through ground-breaking regulations. To this end, we trace manifestations of this approach within the proposed Artificial Intelligence Act. We argue that the Act, while evoking the value of fundamental rights protection, does not support genuine emancipation of citizens in the digital world, as it hands over the issue of protection to expert bodies and institutions. The European Union's unique approach to regulation of the digital economy does not reflect the triple movement postulated in Nancy Fraser's critique of Karl Polanyi's double movement as it does not include solutions that would allow the societal actors to enforce their rights concerning artificial intelligence. Thus, the Act serves mostly as a tool to build the European Union's political position. – Reproduced https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/09646639231152866  aSocial and Legal Studies