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Informationen zum Autor Lyombe Eko is associate professor and director of graduate studies in the School of Journalism and Mass Communication at the University of Iowa. He is also Co-Director of the African Studies Program. Klappentext This volume explores sameness and difference between the United States and France in the matters of freedom of expression on the Internet. Contributors present American exceptionalism and the French exception as functionally equivalent logics that lead to different freedom of expression outcomes. This volume explores sameness and difference between the United States and France in the matters of freedom of expression on the Internet. Contributors present American exceptionalism and the French exception as functionally equivalent logics that lead to different freedom of expression outcomes. Inhaltsverzeichnis Part I: Theoretical ApproachesChapter 1: American Exceptionalism, the French Exception, and Digital Media Law Chapter 2: Freedom of Expression in The United States and France: Political, Ideological & Cultural ContextsChapter 3: American Exceptionalism and Internet LawChapter 4: The French Exception (L'Exception Française) and Digital Media LawPart II: Case Studies: Exceptionalism and Media Law in the United States and FranceChapter 5: New Media, Same Old Sex Scandals: Comparative Exceptionalism, Freedom of Expression and Invasion of Privacy in France and the United StatesChapter 6: Intellectual Property Law and the Transfer of Collective Journalistic Works from Real Space to Cyberspace: The Case of the United States and FranceChapter 7: New Media, Old Interest Groups: Civil Society and Digital Media Law in the United States and FranceChapter 8: Google Books, "Linguistic Capitalism" and the Exceptional Intellectual Property Law Regimes of the United States and FranceChapter 9: Intellectual Property, Freedom of Expression, and Regulation of Internet "Gripe Sites" in the United States and France...