Journal of High Technology Law
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Journal of High Technology Law (JHTL) is one of five honor boards (law reviews) at Suffolk University Law School in Boston, Massachusetts. The Journal was founded in 1998 and became Suffolk University Law School's fourth honor board law journal in 2001[1]. The publishes all of its articles online[1]. Professors, experts, attorneys and students regularly contribute to the Journal.
Suffolk's Journal of High Technology Law publishes articles in a wide variety of areas[1] including:
- Intellectual Property
- Information Technology
- Constitutional Law and the Internet
- International Law and Business
- Cybercrime
- Biomedicine and Biotechnology
- Privacy Rights
- Copyright Law
- E-Commerce
- Trademark Law
- Trade Secrets
- Communications and Media Law
- Entertainment Law
- National and International Tort Law and the Internet
- Computer and Internet Law
[edit] Editorial Board
From [2]
Job | Name |
---|---|
Editor-in-Chief | Elizabeth Vander Voort |
Lead Articles Editors | Jon Chatalian and Jenna Hentoff |
Development Editor | Courtney Shea |
Managing Editor | Shaun Van Eyk |
Content Editors | Matthew Fisher and Jeremy Bohn |
Book Review Editor | Heather Bennett |
Associate Managing Editor | Galen Lewis |
Note and Comment Editor | Justin Cohen |
[edit] References
- ^ a b c About the Journal of High Technology Law. Retrieved on 2008-05-26.
- ^ Masthead of the Journal of High Technology Law. Retrieved on 2008-05-26.