Showing posts with label Marquette. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marquette. Show all posts

Friday, March 22, 2013

Featured Paper: Democratic Values in a Digitized World: Regulating Internet Speech in Schools to Further the Educational Mission

From the Marquette Law Review - the article can be found here (by Maureen Sullivan): Democratic Values in a Digitized World: Regulating Internet Speech in Schools to Further the Educational Mission

Here's the abstract:
The Internet is a remarkable tool—so remarkable that using the word “tool” to describe it is painfully inadequate. With a click of a mouse, a few strokes on a keyboard, or a swipe on a screen, the Internet allows instant communication and transaction at any time by anyone in the world. Young people, especially, have embraced the Internet as a means of communicating with peers and interacting with the world around them. In fact, the Internet may be thought of as a social context—similar to school, church, or home—where young people’s identities are influenced and shaped. As a result, what takes place online may have implications in the off-line world. 
One of those offline places implicated by Internet expression is the public school system. Public elementary and high schools are unique institutions. They have long been recognized as playing a dominant role in maintaining our democratic society by inculcating in students certain values such as respect, honesty, citizenship, responsibility, and integrity. And, because public students enjoy less constitutional protections on school grounds and during school hours, public schools have been permitted to discourage expression and behavior that conflicts with those values. But there is a disagreement over whether public schools may discourage Internet expression that conflicts with those values. This Comment seeks to explain why permitting schools to limit certain Internet expression—regardless where or when the Internet expression occurred— promotes the educational mission of public schools.

Sunday, October 28, 2012

Cybercrime Review welcomes Emil Ovbiagele as guest writer

I am excited to welcome Emil Ovbiagele as a guest writer for Cybercrime Review. Emil, a 2L at Marquette University Law School, will post (as his busy schedule permits) as a guest writer between now and the end of the year. Emil's first post on the blog with appear tomorrow morning. He plans to formally join Cybercrime Review as a permanent author at the beginning of 2013. See below for a description of Emil's impressive credentials.

Emil is currently a 2L at Marquette University Law School pursuing a a joint J.D./M.A. in Law and International Affairs.  In 2011, he received his B.A. in International Affairs from Marquette University with a focus on the politics of developing countries. Emil is currently interning at the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin for Chief Judge Charles Clevert. He previously interned with the Honorable Justice Patrick Crooks of the Wisconsin Supreme Court.

With a passion for writing, Emil has worked as a columnist for The Marquette University Tribune and as a blogger for an online millennial-centered magazine. In his downtime, he enjoys writing poetry, playing soccer and traveling.