Paul Schiff Berman
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.