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<big>'''Welcome to iLaw 2011 wiki!'''</big>
===Overview===
After a five year hiatus, the world-renowned iLaw Program is returning to the Harvard Law School. The Berkman Center’s [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/teaching/ilaw# Internet Law Program] (iLaw) was initially launched in 2000 to offer the public a way to learn about national and international legal, economic, and public interest debates surrounding the Internet from leading experts in the field.


After a five year hiatus, the world-renowned iLaw conference is returning to the Harvard Law School. Taught by leading experts in the field, the Berkman Center’s [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/teaching/ilaw# Internet Law Program] (iLaw) teaches and shapes the most pressing cyberlaw issues being debated by lawmakers in the U.S. and internationally.
The 2011 iLaw Program will engage new topics and revisit older topics within the technology, law and policy, and social science fields over a four-day conference, over September 5-9, 2011. Conference participants will consist of current students from the [http://law.harvard.edu/ Harvard Law School] (HLS) and the [http://seas.harvard.edu/ Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences] (SEAS), as well as selected researchers, lawyers, executives, faculty members, and technologists from the Harvard community and beyond.


[http://cyber.law.harvard.edu The Berkman Center] initiated the Internet Law Program in 2000 to offer the public a way to learn about legal, economic, and public interest debates surrounding the Internet. The program has focused particularly on national and international regulatory frameworks governing Internet usage. In its current iteration, the conference will engage fiercely debated topics including privacy, property, speech, and governance.
The program is also being offered as a rigorous survey level HLS [http://www.law.harvard.edu/academics/courses/2011-12/?id=9774 course]. The conference and course will run from Tuesday, September 6 through Friday, September 9, with an optional session on the evening of Monday, September 5, and is jointly offered with SEAS.


==Contents==
==Contents==

Revision as of 15:13, 22 June 2011

Overview

After a five year hiatus, the world-renowned iLaw Program is returning to the Harvard Law School. The Berkman Center’s Internet Law Program (iLaw) was initially launched in 2000 to offer the public a way to learn about national and international legal, economic, and public interest debates surrounding the Internet from leading experts in the field.

The 2011 iLaw Program will engage new topics and revisit older topics within the technology, law and policy, and social science fields over a four-day conference, over September 5-9, 2011. Conference participants will consist of current students from the Harvard Law School (HLS) and the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS), as well as selected researchers, lawyers, executives, faculty members, and technologists from the Harvard community and beyond.


Contents

(add description of typology here)

The Pillars of iLaw

Network Access and Open Systems
Privacy
Intellectual Property
Cybersecurity
Online Liberty
Digital Humanities

Cross-sectional Modules

History of Cyberlaw
Methodologies
The Global Internet and Internationalization
User Innovation

Examples and Case Studies

Digital Libraries and Archives
Youth and Media
Cloud Computing
Broadband

Navigation

(Categories to be added here)