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List of contents
Contents: Series preface; Introduction; Part I Cyberspace and Intellectual Paradigms: How computers change the way we think, Sherry Turkle; Communications revolutions and legal culture: an elusive relationship, Richard J. Ross. Part II Cyberspace and Metaphor: Cyberspace as place and the tragedy of the digital anticommons, Dan Hunter. Part III Cyberspace and Globalization: Societal constitutionalism: alternatives to state-centred constitutional theory?, Gunther Teubner; Towards a cosmopolitan vision of conflict of laws: redefining governmental interests in a global era, Paul Schiff Berman. Part IV Cyberspace and Legal Realism: Foucault in cyberspace: surveillance, sovereignty and hardwired censors, James Boyle; Regulation by contract, regulation by machine, Margaret Jane Radin. Part V Cyberspace and Freedom of Expression: What things regulate speech: CDA 2.0 vs. filtering, Lawrence Lessig; Digital speech and democratic culture: a theory of freedom of expression for the information society, Jack M. Balkin. Part VI Cyberspace and Copyright: Copyright and control over new technologies of dissemination, Jane C. Ginsberg; Sharing and stealing, Jessica Litman. Part VII Cyberspace and Privacy: Examined lives: informational privacy and the subject as object, Julie E. Cohen. Part VIII Cyberspace, Identity, and Community I : Whose republic? Anupam Chander ; Cyber-race, Jerry Kang. Part IX Cyberspace, Identity and Community II: Virtual(ly) law: the emergence of law in LambdaMOO, Jennifer L. Mnookin; Virtual worlds as comparative law, James Grimmelmann; Name index.
About the author
Paul Schiff Berman
Summary
This collection brings together many of these seminal works, which variously seek to interrogate assumptions about the nature of communication, knowledge, invention, information, sovereignty, identity and community.