The Technology Policy ’08 conference, Computers, Freedom, and Privacy, will be held May 20-23, 2008, in New Haven, CT.
It is sponsored by Google, AOL, Yale Law and Media Project (LAMP), Yale Information Society Project (ISP), and the Association for Computing Machinery.
The Call for presentations, tutorials, and workshops has different options. Most have a deadline of March 21, 2008. The deadline for Birds of a Feather Session proposals is April 21, 2008.
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on March 4th, 2008
| EVENTS |
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The Technology Policy ’08 conference, Computers, Freedom, and Privacy, will be held May 20-23, 2008, in New Haven, CT.
It is sponsored by Google, AOL, Yale Law and Media Project (LAMP), Yale Information Society Project (ISP), and the Association for Computing Machinery.
The Call for presentations, tutorials, and workshops has different options. Most have a deadline of March 21, 2008. The deadline for Birds of a Feather Session proposals is April 21, 2008.
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on March 4th, 2008
| EVENTS |
no comments
| May 20, 2008 | to | May 23, 2008 |
The Technology Policy ’08 conference, Computers, Freedom, and Privacy, will be held May 20-23, 2008, in New Haven, CT.
It is sponsored by Google, AOL, Yale Law and Media Project (LAMP), Yale Information Society Project (ISP), and the Association for Computing Machinery.
The Call for presentations, tutorials, and workshops has different options. Most have a deadline of March 21, 2008. The deadline for Birds of a Feather Session proposals is April 21, 2008.
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on March 4th, 2008
| EVENTS |
no comments
The Technology Policy ’08 conference, Computers, Freedom, and Privacy, will be held May 20-23, 2008, in New Haven, CT.
It is sponsored by Google, AOL, Yale Law and Media Project (LAMP), Yale Information Society Project (ISP), and the Association for Computing Machinery.
The Call for presentations, tutorials, and workshops has different options. Most have a deadline of March 21, 2008. The deadline for Birds of a Feather Session proposals is April 21, 2008.
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on March 4th, 2008
| CALLS FOR PAPERS, CONFERENCES, Law and Cyberspace |
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Chicago Law & Politics
Nathaniel Persily (Columbia Law), Vote Fraud in the Eye of the Beholder: The Role of Public Opinion in the Challenge to Voter Identification Requirements
Chicago-Kent
Graeme W. Austin (Arizona Law), What is Copyright? A Constitutional Question, Apparently
Chicago-Kent Legal History
Allison Tirres (DePaul Law), The Railroad, the Courthouse, and the Making of New Legal Borderlands
Harvard Internet & Society
Jim Bessen (Boston University Law), Patent Failure
Lewis & Clark
Craig Johnston (Lewis & Clark Law)
Minnesota Law & History
Yaffa Epstein, From Emission to Pollution: Business Interests and the Regulation of Smoke Emission in the Twin Cities, 1890-1910
St. Thomas (MN)
Francesco Parisi (Minnesota Law)
Texas
Barbara Harlow (Texas English), Tortured Thoughts: The Example Set by Ruth Frst from her Interrogation in 1963 to her Assassination in 1982
Washington
Wei Song (China Law Institute), From Invention to Innovation: Laws and Regulations of Technology Transfer in China
Yale Legal History
Mark Graber (Maryland Law), Maintaining Judicial Review: The Debate Over Section 25 Revisited
Posted by pittlegalscholarship on March 4th, 2008
| Business Law, COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS, Comparative Law, Constitutional Law, Environmental Law, Intellectual Property, Jurisprudence, Law and Politics, Law and Society, Law and Technology, Legal History, Uncategorized |
no comments