FindLaw > Practice Areas > Cyberspace Law > Jurisdiction > Publications - Journals, Newsletters & Articles

(none)
  • Concerning Problems of Criminal Procedure Law Connected with Information Technology Recommendation No. R (95) 13 of the Committee of Ministers to Member States.
  • Governing Cyberspace By David G. Post. What is the source of those law(s) that will govern our interactions in cyberspace?
  • Jurisdiction in a World Without Borders By Dan L. Burk.
  • Jurisdictional Quid Pro Quo and the Law of Cyberspace By David R. Johnson. The net should be allowed to grow without premature intervention by any legal authorities other than those that spontaneously arise online.
  • Jurisdictional Trends in Cyberspace By Henry M. Cooper. Whether the "minimum contacts" test derived in International Shoe is applicable to cyberspace activities.
  • Law and Borders--The Rise of Law in Cyberspace Separated from doctrine tied to territorial jurisdictions, new rules will emerge, in a variety of online spaces, to govern a wide range of new phenomena that have no clear parallel in the nonvirtual world.
  • Personal Jurisdiction and the Net - Does Your Website Subject You to the Laws of Every State in the Union? Dennis F. Hernandez and David May Los Angeles Daily Journal July 15, 1996.
  • Personal Jurisdiction on the Internet David G. Post and Dawn C. Nunziato, Cyberspace Law Institute. The following cases discuss the propriety of a court's exercise of personal jurisdiction over defendants based upon the defendants' Internet activities.
  • Personal Jurisdiction on the Internet - Where is CyberSpace? By Jeffrey R. Kuester and Jennifer M. Graves.This article summarizes known personal jurisdiction decisions regarding the Internet.
  • Reach of Internet Complicates Jurisdiction Issues From the Washington Business Journal. When can one party require another party, which is in a different state or country, to come and defend itself before the court of the suing party?
  • What Jurisdiction Controls? From Satterlee Stephens Burke & Burke. It is still too early to determine definitively how most courts will assess jurisdictional questions in the context of entities which have no "real" physical location, but only a "virtual" location on-line.

  • Personal Jurisdiction in Cyberspace From LeBoeuf, Lamb, Grenne & MacRae.
  •     News & Analysis
       News
    related news
       Search News
       (none) Case Summaries
    related case summaries
       Search Case Summaries
       Law Firm Articles
    related articles
       Search Articles