You are viewing a read-only archive of the Blogs.Harvard network. Learn more.

Search Results for ‘palfrey’

Access Denied: The Practice and Policy of Global Internet Filtering

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

Access Denied: The Practice and Policy of Global Internet Filtering

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.

2 comments April 26th, 2007

Bloggership 2006: Law Blogs as Legal Scholarship

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.

2 comments August 14th, 2006

Next Posts


Meta

License

Creative Commons License

Unless otherwise noted this site and its contents are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported license.