By krisnelson on Nov 20, 2011 in business / culture / law / science studies / technology / theory
In The Wealth of Networks: How Social Production Transforms Markets and Freedom, Yochai Benkler discusses his vision of the role of technology in historical change. He rejects an overly deterministic vision of technology (which he connects with Lewis Mumford and Marshall McLuhan), but also rejects a view of technology as immaterial to a society’s direction.
Posted in business, culture, law, science studies, technology, theory | Tagged culture, innovation, Lewis Mumford, Marshall McLuhan, religion, technology, Yochai Benkler |
By krisnelson on Nov 20, 2011 in business / constitution / culture / history / intellectual property / law / technology
In “Digital Speech and Democratic Culture: A Theory of Freedom of Expression for the Information Society,” Jack Balkin (of the blog Balkinization) writes about what he sees as the appropriation of free speech ideals by media corporations in an effort to maximize their capital investments.
Posted in business, constitution, culture, history, intellectual property, law, technology | Tagged Clinton Rossiter, constitution, copyright, digital speech, freedom of speech, intellectual property, Jack Balkin, law, liberty |
By krisnelson on Oct 20, 2011 in culture / government / history / law
The Roman civil law tradition (which prevails in Europe) has had a larger impact on American jurisprudence than is generally acknowledged. Indeed, although the United States considers itself a common-law country, we in fact use a system that combines common (judge-made, customary, adversarial, precedent-focused) with civil (usually statute-based and inquisitorial) law, but which in England focused on “equity” or fairness and justice.
Posted in culture, government, history, law | Tagged civil law, common law, England, United States |
By krisnelson on Oct 11, 2011 in culture / government / history / technology
In Spreading the News, Richard R. John writes about the development of the American postal system in the eighteenth century, and the police choices that leverages the system as a means of newspaper distribution.
Posted in culture, government, history, technology | Tagged government, history, Mail, Newspaper, Richard R. John, United States |
By krisnelson on Sep 29, 2011 in culture / law / technology
Software won’t replace lawyers, but it will reduce the demand for certain routine legal services and raise the complexity of litigation. Those without the software will be at a disadvantage. It will also cut into the work of paralegals. But not lawyers.
Posted in culture, law, technology | Tagged attorney, business, law, lawyer, Polygraph, Slate, software, technology |
By krisnelson on Sep 22, 2011 in culture / government / history / law / science studies
In The Magic Mirror: Law in American History, Kermit Hall quotes former Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. to explain why we should do legal history: “This abstraction called the Law is a magic mirror, [wherein] we see reflected, not only our own lives, but the lives of all men that have been!”
Posted in culture, government, history, law, science studies | Tagged government, history, law, Legal history, Oliver Wendell Holmes |
By krisnelson on Mar 11, 2011 in culture / government / history / law / privacy / technology / wiretap
It took nearly 50 years for Justice Brandeis’ ground-breaking law review article on the right to privacy to begin to widely influence judicial decisions. By 1948, though, a dozen or so states had begun to recognize the right as a part of common law.
Posted in culture, government, history, law, privacy, technology, wiretap | Tagged Brandeis, common law, Fourth Amendment, Katz, privacy, publication, trespass, Wilfred Feinberg |