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===The Pillars of iLaw===
===The Pillars of iLaw===
[[Network Access and Open Systems]] <br>
[[Network Access and Open Systems]] <br>
[[Online Liberty]] <br>
[[Cybersecurity]] <br>
[[Selected_IP_Issues|Intellectual Property]]<br>
[[Privacy]]<br>
[[Privacy]]<br>
[[Selected_IP_Issues|Intellectual Property]]<br>
[[Cybersecurity]] <br>
[[Online Liberty]] <br>
[[Digital Humanities]] <br>
[[Digital Humanities]] <br>


===Cross-sectional Modules===
===Cross-sectional Modules===
[[History of Cyberlaw]] <br>
[[User Innovation]] <br>
[[Methodologies]] <br>
[[Methodologies]] <br>
[[The Global Internet and Internationalization]] <br>
[[The Global Internet and Internationalization]] <br>
[[User Innovation]] <br>
[[History of Cyberlaw]] <br>


===Examples and Case Studies===
===Examples and Case Studies===

Revision as of 13:20, 27 July 2011

iLaw Wiki Navigation
Pillar Themes of iLaw
Open Systems/Access · Online Liberty and FOE
The Changing Internet: Cybersecurity · Intellectual Property
Digital Humanities · Cooperation · Privacy
Cross-sectional Themes of iLaw
The History of the Internet
The Global Internet · Interoperability
The Study of the Internet: New Methods for New Technologies
The Future of the Internet
Case Studies
Digital Libraries, Archives, and Rights Registries
Exploring the Arab Spring · Minds for Sale
User Innovation · Mutual Aid
Misc
Program Schedule · Program Logistics
Evening Events · Student Projects · Participation
Old iLaw Videos · Mid-Point Check-in

Program Overview

Since the last iLaw conference was held nearly five years ago, the debates at the intersection of technology, law, and policy have continued to evolve. The introduction of new technologies – and new uses of old technologies – raise a broad range of problems to explore. To name a few examples, the intervening years have seen the growth of social networking tools; Facebook has gained more than 750 million users worldwide and has found itself at the center of privacy debates. Information technologies have played an unprecedented role in recent protests in the Middle East and North Africa, at times in tension with US foreign policy and export controls. In the US, government regulators and major ISPs continue to struggle with finding the right balance points for network governance and regulatory authority.

Growing Internet usage trends, disruptive technologies, increased efforts by governments and private entities to control the online space continue to reshape the cyber landscape. These issues, alongside the actors who provide the technologies and the users who engage with them, are at the center of many global policy debates. iLaw 2011 will be a unique opportunity to reexamine these areas of inquiry and core questions while engaging with the new and emerging issues and thorny debates that are constantly reshaping the field.

The 2011 iLaw Program is designed to take participants through the evolution of information technologies and the Internet, including their past, present, and future. Each module will provide a bridge to the past, beginning with a brief sketch of how a particular issue has evolved over the course of recent decades, both from an intellectual history perspective and via changes in policy, practice, and technology. Faculty and selected guests will use this foundation to explore how technical, social, legal, economic, and policy trends and debates have evolved over time, and identify the primary questions and issues that currently define the online space.

Logistics and Program Agenda

Program Materials

(add description of typology here)

The Pillars of iLaw

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

Cross-sectional Modules

User Innovation
Methodologies
The Global Internet and Internationalization
History of Cyberlaw

Examples and Case Studies

Digital Libraries and Archives
Youth and Media
Cloud Computing
Broadband
The Future of the Internet
Minds for Sale
Case Study: WikiLeaks
Case Study: User Innovation
Case Study: GNI/Role of Intermediaries
Case Study: Herdict