(Also see law.gov:MA) The Harvard Law School Law.Gov workshop on June 18 is the last in a 6-month series of such workshops that have taken place throughout the country. In this final workshop, participants will discuss the implications of some core principles about access to primary legal materials. Are these principles workable? What will it take to make them real? What are the implications of these principles? Our hope is that upon completion of this workshop, a crisp set of basic principles can be presented and discussed, perhaps leading to the enactment of some of these principles into policy through mechanisms such as judicial rules, executive orders, or legislation.
Registration is required; visit http://tinyurl.com/28v3h4v to sign up. Please note that video will be captured for the workshop and posted on the Internet. This is the second day of a two-day workshop focused on Law.gov. To register for Law.gov: Massachusetts, taking place on Thursday 6/17, please visit this page. You are welcome to attend one or both days of the event.
10-10:45 AM - Welcome to Day 2, Overview of Previous Workshops
John Palfrey, Harvard Law Library
Carl Malamud, Public.Resource.Org
10:45-11:30 AM - Is There a "Right" to Access the Law?
John Palfrey, Harvard Law Library
11:30 - 12:00 - Is there copyright in the law?
Phil Malone, Berkman Center
12-1pm - Lunch
1-1:45PM - Technical Principles
Tom Bruce, Cornell Legal Information Institute
1:45-2:30PM - Non-Technical Principles
Carl Malamud, Public.Resource.Org
2:30-3:00PM - Next Steps for Law.Gov
About Law.gov
Law.Gov is an effort to create a report documenting exactly what it would take to create a distributed registry and repository of all primary legal materials in the United States. Continued...
Links
- Law.gov
- Radio Berkman: This Law is My Law (with Carl Malamud and David Weinberger)
No comments:
Post a Comment