A volume exploring how gender, race, sexuality, disability + class shape cyberspace and the laws that govern it. Summer 2024.
Introduction
Cyberlaw, but Make It Feminist
Meg Leta Jones
Ownership x Feminism
Feminist Use
Amanda Levendowski
Defending the Right to Repair
Leah Grinvald + Ofer Tur-Sinai
Computer Software Patents and Gendered Views of Programming as Drudgery and Innovation
Nina Srejovic
Empowering and Oppressive #Tagmarks
Alexandra Roberts
A Bouquet for Battling the Expansion of Trade Secrets in the Public Sector
Cynthia Conti-Cook
Chinese and Russian Cybercrime and the Global Racial Orders of Intellectual Property
Anjali Vats
Access x Feminism
Accidental Abolition? Exploring Section 230 as Non-Reformist Reform
Kendra Albert
The Curb-Cut Effect and the Perils of Accessibility Without Disability
Blake E. Reid
Uncovering Online Discrimination Confronted with Legal Uncertainty and Corporate Power
Esha Bhandari
Dobbs Online: Digital Rights as Abortion Rights
Elizabeth Joh
Digital Security and Reproductive Rights: Lessons for Feminist Cyberlaw
Michela Meister + Karen Levy
Governance x Feminism
The Rise, Fall, and Rise of Civil Libertarianism
Hannah Bloch-Wehba
Artificial Intelligence, Microwork, and the Racial Politics of Care
Iván Chaar López + Victoria Sánchez,
Black Feminist Antitrust for a Safer Internet
Gabrielle Rejouis
Consent (Still) Won’t Save Us
Jasmine McNealy
Revisioning Algorithms as a Black Feminist Project
Ngozi Okidegbe
Conclusion
Toward a Feminist Cyberlaw A-Ha
Kate Darling