%0 Journal Article %T The language of digital constitutionalism and the role of national parliaments %A Maria Carmela Catone %A Mauro Santaniello %A Nicola Palladino %A Paolo Diana %J International Communication Gazette %@ 1748-0493 %D 2018 %R 10.1177/1748048518757138 %X Attempts to establish constitutional provisions for the Internet have been promoted since the late 1990s, mainly by the global civil society and intergovernmental organisations. More recently, a new wave of digital constitutionalism has emerged from the nation-state level, and particularly from national parliaments. In order to better understand this process, the article seeks to investigate, from both a theoretical and an empirical perspective, whether and to what extent parliamentary initiatives exhibit specific political features compared to constitutional attempts emerging from other kinds of sources. Further, the study aims to assess if drafting initiatives overlap or, rather, respond in different ways to different constitutional concerns %K Constitutionalism %K digital constitutionalism %K digital rights %K fundamental rights %K internet bill of rights %K internet governance %K parliament %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1748048518757138