Blockchain, Digital Identity, E-government

This chapter examines the legal and technical implications of the application of blockchain technology to authenticate and verify identity for e-Government services and transactions.

[1]  J. Doek,et al.  The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child : a guide to the "Travaux préparatoires" , 1993, American Journal of International Law.

[2]  Miles Hewstone,et al.  A perceptual discrimination investigation of the own-race effect and intergroup experience , 2006 .

[3]  V. Bruce,et al.  Recognition of unfamiliar faces , 2000, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

[4]  Gillian Rhodes,et al.  Contact, configural coding and the other-race effect in face recognition. , 2008, British journal of psychology.

[5]  Un Desa Transforming our world : The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development , 2016 .

[6]  Adi Shamir,et al.  A method for obtaining digital signatures and public-key cryptosystems , 1978, CACM.

[7]  G. Pike,et al.  When Seeing should not be Believing: Photographs, Credit Cards and Fraud , 1997 .

[8]  Ngaire Naffine,et al.  Who are Law's Persons? From Cheshire Cats to Responsible Subjects , 2003 .

[9]  Clare Sullivan Digital Identity: An Emergent Legal Concept: Abbreviations/Terms and Definitions , 2010 .

[10]  The effect of expectation on the identification of known and unknown persons , 1992 .

[11]  C. Reich The Individual Sector , 1991 .

[12]  Clare Sullivan Digital identity and mistake , 2012, Int. J. Law Inf. Technol..

[13]  Clare Linda Sullivan Digital citizenship and the right to digital identity under international law , 2016, Comput. Law Secur. Rev..

[14]  Eric W. Burger,et al.  E-residency and blockchain , 2017, Comput. Law Secur. Rev..

[15]  Conceptualising Identity , 2007 .

[16]  Adi Shamir,et al.  A method for obtaining digital signatures and public-key cryptosystems , 1978, CACM.

[17]  S. Stevenage,et al.  Haven't we met before? The effect of facial familiarity on repetition priming. , 2006, British journal of psychology.