Seminar - 2 hours. This course examines from a globalized perspective a broad range of internet governance issues, ranging from free speech ideologies, criminal speech regulations, copyright, digital intermediary liability, administrative censorship online, online anonymity regulation, “right to be forgotten”, privacy and data protection, net neutrality, MLAT, cybersecurity, intersection with AI, etc., drawing from established cases and practices of constitutional law, antitrust law, communications law, and international human rights/economic law around the world. Unlike the mainstream scholarship which focuses on the gap between the U.S. jurisprudence and international human rights law, the seminar attempts to identify a globally consistent set of theories and arguments that have gained normative and prescriptive traction in the relevant regional or international debates. This course will prepare students for a career in international media/digital law practice. Grading will be based 90% on a final paper and 10% on class participation (NO CURVE). Each student will pick a topic with the instructor early in the semester and will be asked to present and defend their paper in class. The paper will be a form of amicus brief that will be filed in a court in the US or Southeast Asia or an international forum in support of a real or virtual constitutional challenge to state action or a real or virtual civil suit against corporate action, using the US case law and the international human rights law.
Final Assessment: Paper
Grading Mode: Letter Grading
Graduation Requirements: Satisfies Advanced Writing Requirement.