


default search action
Journal of Information, Law and Technology, 2001
Volume 2001, Number 1, 2001
- Julie Moreton:

Editorial.
- John J. Borking, Charles D. Raab:

Laws, PETs and Other Technologies for Privacy Protection. - Kay Henderson, Hilary Kane:

Internet Patents: Will They Hinder the Development of E-Commerce? - Jacqueline D. Lipton:

Financing E-Commerce: Legal and Practical Risks. - Richard Wu:

New Rules for Resolving Chinese Domain Name Disputes - A Comparative Analysis. - Adrian McCullagh, William J. Caelli, Peter Little:

Signature Stripping: A Digital Dilemma. - Charlotte Waelde:

The Quest for Access in the Digital Era: Copyright and the Internet. - Darryl R. Mountain:

Could New Technologies Cause Great Law Firms to Fail? - Abdul Paliwala:

Learning in Cyberspace - Revised version.
- David A. Thomas:

American Legal Education: Moving from the Classroom Without Paper to Instruction Without the Classroom? - Kenneth J. Withers:

Computer-Based Disclosure and Discovery in Civil Litigation. - Lorna E. Gillies:

A Review of the New Jurisdiction Rules for Electronic Consumer Contracts Within the European Union.
- Andrew Terrett:

Richard Susskind's 'Transforming the Law - Essays on Technology, Justice and the Legal Marketplace'.
- James P. Hutchinson:

Can Trade Mark Protection Respond to the International Threat of Cybersquatting?
- The English translation of the new 'Rules' for Resolving Chinese Domain Name Disputes.

Volume 2001, Number 2, 2001
- Julie Moreton:

Editorial.
- Carolyn Penfold:

Nazis, Porn and Politics: Asserting Control Over Internet Content. - Samtani Anil:

Re-Visiting the Singapore Internet Code of Practice. - Jan Grijpink, Corien Prins:

New Rules for Anonymous Electronic Transactions? An Exploration of the Private Law Implications of Digital Anonymity. - Adam Warren, James Dearnley, Charles Oppenheim:

Sources of Literature on Data Protection and Human Rights. - John Hogan:

Competition Policy for Computer Software Markets. - L. Jean Camp, Serena Syme:

Code as Embedded Speech, Machine, and Service. - Jean-Paul Cailloux, Christophe Roquilly:

Legal Security of Web Sites: Proposal for a Legal Audit Methodology and a Legal Risks Classification. - Peter Duncan, Karen Barton, Patricia McKellar:

Extending Richness and Reach: Empirical Evidence from Public Access Web sites of UK Legal Practices. - Petter Gottschalk:

Benefits from Information and Communication Technology Facilitating Inter-organisational Knowledge Networks: The Case of Eurojuris Law Firms in Norway. - Martin Sloan:

Web Accessibility and the Disability Discrimination Act.
- Subhajit Basu:

Taxation of Electronic Commerce.
- Subhajit Basu:

Taxation of E-Commerce, by William J Craig. - Charles Oppenheim:

E-commerce: A Guide to the Law of Electronic Business, 2nd Edition, D Tunkel and S York (Editors).
- Julia Hörnle:

Disputes Solved in Cyberspace and the Rule of Law.
Volume 2001, Number 3, 2001
- Julie Moreton:

Editorial.
- Robert H. Woods:

'Order in the Virtual Law Classroom...Order in the Virtual Law Classroom' - A Closer Look at American Law Schools in Cyberspace: Constructing Multiple Instructional Strategies for Effective Internet-based Legal Education. - William Byrnes:

A Review of the Development of an Internet Delivered LL.M Program in the United States. - Marlene Le Brun:

Developing Multimedia Flexible Teaching and Learning Packages: Valuing New Genres of Legal Scholarship. - Catherine Colston:

Sui Generis Database Right: Ripe for Review? - Wye Keen Khong:

Spam Law for the Internet. - James D. Miller, Lixin Gao:

Creating a Subpoena-Proof Diary: A Technological Solution to a Legal Problem. - Andrés Guadamuz González:

Habeas Data vs the European Data Protection Directive. - Tracy S. Manly, Lori N. K. Leonard:

New Financial Reporting Regulations for E-Commerce Companies. - Douglas Hancock:

An Assessment of ICANN's Mandatory Uniform Dispute Resolution Policy in Resolving Disputes Over Domain Names.
- John Hogan:

Are You XPerienced? - Abdul Paliwala:

Discoursing the Virtual Classroom.
- David Poyton:

Integrating C&IT into the Delivery of a Law Module: A Reflective Look at Two Postgraduate Modules Delivered in the 2000/2001 Academic Year.

manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.


Google
Google Scholar
Semantic Scholar
Internet Archive Scholar
CiteSeerX
ORCID














