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Law, Technology and Democracy, Fall 2003
New York Law School
Course Description
Governments worldwide are investing billions
in new information and communications technology (ICT) for use in the public
sector. Increasingly, ICT is being used, not simply to automate the business
of government institutions and run them more efficiently. These tools uniquely
enable new forms of interaction between government and citizens and among citizens.
They facilitate the communication upon which democratic life depends. Citizens
and civic groups, too, are using technologies for political activism, organizing
and protest on-line and are enlisting the aid of technology to manage political
activity off-line. At the same time, these tools also facilitate new forms of
surveillance, manipulation and control.
As society prepares to integrate e-government
and e-democracy tools into the fabric of public life, we are faced with the
question of how to design these tools to realize their democratic potential
and avoid unintended consequences. It is not a simple matter of safeguarding
computer systems from hacking and criminal activity or being wary of systems
that could be used for unlawful surveillance in blatant disregard of civil
liberties. Rather the design of ICTs requires conscious choices about how we
want our political and legal institutions of the future to work. In the same
way that the design of a ballot can effect the outcome of an election, the way
a government entity organizes its website will have a fundamental impact on
who has access to which information, who has the opportunity to participate
and who gets left out.
This course starts from the premise that e-government
and e-democracy is not the domain of technologists alone. Rather, because these
technologies imply profound choices of law and policy, lawyers must be involved
in their design. The new generation of lawyers must be able to talk to
the engineers if we are to solve today`s complex problems:
- What are the implications of paperless
e-voting?
- Should all litigation dockets be available
on-line and to whom?
- Should citizens be allowed to post anonymous
comments via the Interet in response to a federal agency rulemaking or must
comments be signed? How should such a digital signature system be designed?
- How will ICT impact the availability of
information under the Freedom of Information Act?
- What are the risks to privacy of personal
information under the Privacy Act when government records go on-line?
- How are political campaigns and the related
law impacted by on-line campaigns?
- How does the law impact the design of
computer systems that enable information exchange between citizen and government?
Between government agencies? From agencies to courts?
- The list goes on....
This course examines the theory, law and policy of electronic government
and electronic democracy. We will study the new federal laws on electronic government
and access to public sector information. This course also examines the social
and political effects of the use of technology in the legal and political process.
Working independently and in small teams the class will apply its understanding
of the theoretical issues studied in the first half of the class to the design
of blueprints fro web-based tools for citizen participation in the second half.
The aim of these hands-on projects is to use both law and technology to develop
new solutions to the complex problems of governance in the digital age.
Recommended but not required prerequisites: Intellectual Property, Telecommunications
and Internet Law.
Go to Course Requirements and Syllabus
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