Call for Papers

"The Global Flow of Information"
A Conference on Law, Culture and Political Economy
Yale Law School Information Society Project (ISP)
Yale Journal of Law & Technology (YJoLT)
International Journal of Communications Law and Policy
(IJCLP)
New Haven, CT (USA)
April 1-3, 2005


We are pleased to announce their second interdisciplinary
writing competition and a call for papers in conjunction
with The Global Flow of Information Conference taking place
on April 1-3, 2005 at Yale Law School. We invite students,
scholars, policy makers, activists and practitioners to
submit papers for the writing competition and/or for
publication by YJoLT/IJCLP.

Conference Description

Patterns of information flow are one of the most important
factors shaping globalization. Today individuals, groups,
countries, and international organizations are trying to
promote and control the flow of different kinds of
information across national borders - information ranging
from intellectual property and scientific research to
political discourse, brand names and cultural symbols. And
digitally networked environments subject information to ever
new methods of distribution and manipulation. Fights over
information flow are going to help define who holds power in
the global information economy.

The groundbreaking conference on Global Flows of
Information, will explore these emerging patterns of
information flow, and their political, economic, social, and
cultural consequences. We will be looking at the following
key questions in six different contexts: (1) governance; (2)
economics; (3) culture; (4) politics; (5) science; (6)
warfare:

- Can the flow of information across borders be controlled?
If so, how?
- Whose interests are going to be affected by flows of
information across borders?
- Who will be empowered and who will lose influence and
authority?
- What role can or should law play in securing freedoms,
rights, and democratic accountability as individuals,
groups, and nations struggle over control of information
flows?
- What lessons can we learn about how to regulate
information flow from past experience with other kinds of
flow across borders- for example, flows of goods, services,
people, and capital?

For a full conference description, questions to be
considered during the conference, list of speakers,
schedule, and resources, please visit the Yale ISP web site
(web address provided at the bottom of this page).

Writing Competition

Submissions for the writing competition must be received by
noon EST, February 15, 2005. The author of the best paper,
as well as two runners-up will be invited to present their
work at a panel during the conference. The author of the
winning paper will receive coverage of his/her travel to and
accommodations at Yale University for the conference.
Selected papers will be announced by March 1st, 2005. The
authors of the award-winning papers will automatically be
invited to publish their work in special Fall 2005 volumes
of the Yale Journal of Law & Technology (http://yjolt.org)
and the International Journal of Communications Law and
Policy (http://www.ijclp.org) devoted to the conference
topic.

Journal Publication

Submissions for publication must be received by noon EST,
May 1st, 2005. The selection committee, composed of the
editorial boards of YJoLT and IJCLP, will review and
consider all submissions for publication in the special Fall
Volume 2005 of the journals, including submissions for the
writing competition. Authors will be notified of acceptance
by June 1st, 2005. The journals reserve the right to decide
which journal will publish which work, based on the
journals' respective audiences and editorial expertise.

Submission Guidelines

All submissions should be written in English in .doc or .pdf
format. They should conform to academic citation standards,
be no longer than 25,000 words, and include an abstract of
up to 250 words. Submissions should be e-mailed
simultaneously to Simone Bonetti
([email protected]) and Boris Rotenberg
([email protected]), lead editors IJCLP; as well as
to Lawrence Cogswell ([email protected]),
Editor-in-Chief, YJoLT. Inquiries may be addressed to any of
the above.


Contact:

Boris Rotenberg
Hauser Global Law School Program, NYU School of Law
40 Washington Square South
New York, NY 10012-1099
USA
Telephone: +1 (212) 998-6691
Facsimile: +1 (212) 995-4656
Email: [email protected]
Website: http://islandia.law.yale.edu/isp/GlobalFlow/



_________________________________

InterPhil List Administration:
http://interphil.polylog.org/

Intercultural Philosophy Calendar:
http://agd.polylog.org/cal/

Reply via email to