Search Results for ‘palfrey’
Click To Play Video
Rob Faris, the OpenNet Initiative‘s Research Director and John Palfrey, one of the project’s Principal Investigators, lead a discussion of Internet filtering and provided a glimpse of the results of ONI’s first global survey of Internet censorship.
In the last year ONI has studied forty countries and found a substantial increase in Internet censorship, colored by complex and dynamic political, legal and social processes. The research will be documented in the forthcoming MIT Press book: Access Denied: the Practice and Policy of Global Internet Filtering.
The OpenNet Initiative is a partnership between the Citizen Lab at the Munk Centre for International Studies, University of Toronto, the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School, the Advanced Network Research Group at the Cambridge Security Programme at Cambridge University, and the Oxford Internet Institute at the University of Oxford.
Runtime: 1:08:57, size: 320×240, 188mb, QuickTime .MOV, H.264 codec
May 2nd, 2007
Rob Faris, the OpenNet Initiative‘s Research Director and John Palfrey, one of the project’s Principal Investigators, lead a discussion of Internet filtering and provided a glimpse of the results of ONI’s first global survey of Internet censorship.
Download the audio podcast (time: 1:08:57).
In the last year ONI has studied forty countries and found a substantial increase in Internet censorship, colored by complex and dynamic political, legal and social processes. The research will be documented in the forthcoming MIT Press book: Access Denied: the Practice and Policy of Global Internet Filtering.
The OpenNet Initiative is a partnership between the Citizen Lab at the Munk Centre for International Studies, University of Toronto, the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School, the Advanced Network Research Group at the Cambridge Security Programme at Cambridge University, and the Oxford Internet Institute at the University of Oxford.
April 26th, 2007
Bloggership: How Blogs Are Transforming Legal Scholarship
April 28, 2006
Welcome: John Palfrey
(Executive Director, The Berkman Center for Internet & Society)
Introduction: Paul Caron
(Cincinnati; Publisher & Editor-in-Chief, Law Professor Blogs Network)
Law Blogs as Legal Scholarship
Papers
Doug Berman (Ohio State; Sentencing Law and Policy): Scholarship in Action: The Power, Possibilities, and Pitfalls for Law Professor Blogs
Larry Solum (Illinois; Legal Theory Blog): Blogging and the Transformation of Legal Scholarship
Kate Litvak (Texas): Blog as a Bugged Water Cooler
Commentators
Paul Butler (George Washington; BlackProf)
Jim Lindgren (Northwestern; The Volokh Conspiracy)
Ellen Podgor (Stetson; White Collar Crime Prof Blog)
Download the MP3.
August 14th, 2006
Next Posts
Meta
License
Unless otherwise noted this site and its contents are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported license.