Journal: I. J. Law and Information Technology

Volume 2, Issue 3

221 -- 254Stephen Saxby. Public Sector Policy and the Information Superhighway
255 -- 286Neil Hutton, Cyrus Tata, John N. Wilson. Sentencing and Information Technology: Incidental Reform?
287 -- 326Chris Reed, Ian Walden. Legal Problems of Electronic Bulletin Board Operators
327 -- 354Dag Wiese Schartum. Dirt in the Machinery of Government? Legal Challenges Connected to Computerized Case Processing in Public Administration
355 -- 362Ian Lloyd. Review

Volume 2, Issue 2

111 -- 153Steven Ang. The Idea-Expression Dichotomy and Merger Doctrine in the Copyright Laws of the U.S. and the U.K
154 -- 193Antonio A. Martino. Artificial Intelligence and Law
194 -- 209Peter Blume. Practical data protection
210 -- 216Daphne Gelbert. Book Reviews
217 -- 218Fiona Nicholson. Book Reviews
218 -- 219Trevor M. Cook. Book Reviews

Volume 2, Issue 1

1 -- 31Stephen Saxby. A Jurisprudence for Information Technology Law
32 -- 63Jon Bing. The Baltic Republics and their Legal Information Systems
64 -- 85Otto Banho Licks, Joao Marcello de Araujo Junior. Criminal Law aspects of Computer Crime: General Theory of Computer Crimes and the proposed bill to modify the Brazilian Penal Code
86 -- 97Michael Lehmann. Theory of Property Rights and Copyright Protection of Computer Programs in Europe
98 -- 109William E. Boyd, Winton D. Wood. Review: How to Practice Law with Computers, by Henry H. Perritt, Jr