SYLLABUS
Fall 2000
[July 20, August 21, September 13, 2000]
Personal Bio Writing Assignment
LAW OF ELECTRONIC MEDIA
Fall 2000
Professor Johnson
1. Pick up and read the course syllabus, available from the class Web site and in hard copy from Mr. Johnson's assistant, Jessie Kriebs, Room 433, 335-9091. It includes early reading and writing assignments, including discussion questions for our first class meeting, August 23.
2. First class meeting is Wednesday, August 23, 6:30 to 8:30 p.m., Room 125.
3. The casebook is: Carter, Franklin and Wright, The First Amendment and the Fifth Estate (5th ed. 1999), available from the law school bookstore.
4. The first reading assignment is pp. 817-866 -- but be sure to see the section in the syllabus headed "Privacy Material Discussion Wednesday, August 23."
5. Coordinates for Mr. Johnson are voice phone and messages: 337-5555; e-mail: njohnson@inav.net; office: room 445. His Web page (with useful resources for you and links to past classes) is: http://www.nicholasjohnson.org
6. Assistant. Mr. Johnson’s assistant is
Jessie Kriebs, e-mail: jessie-kriebs@uiowa.edu,
Room 433, voice phone and messages: 335-9091.
Coordinates: E-mail: njohnson@inav.net Voice: 319-337-5555 (with 24-hour answering machine, where all messages should be left); Postal: Box 1876, Iowa City IA 52244-1876; Web page: http://www.nicholasjohnson.org; Office: Room 445, 335-9146. Assistant: Jessie Kriebs, E-mail: jessie-kriebs@uiowa.edu, Office: Room 433, 335-9091.
Your E-mail: Provide Mr. Johnson or Ms. Kriebs your e-mail address as soon as possible. This is the quickest and surest way to get class information to you. (If you are unable or unwilling to receive e-mail, let either of them know and other arrangements will be made.)
Office Hours: Feel free to come by any time the office door is open. Normally this will be 9:00 to 2:50 every day. If for your convenience you'd rather make an appointment please do so. But it's not necessary.
Class Time and Place: Class meets 14 Wednesday evenings, 6:30-8:30 p.m., Room 125 BLB, August 23 through November 29, except for November 22 (Thanksgiving recess).
Casebook: Carter, Franklin and Wright, The First Amendment and the Fifth Estate (5th ed. 1999)
Purpose: The "information economy" now constitutes over one half of our gross domestic product. This course is designed to help you identify, and think through, some of the legal and public policy issues of this Information Age. Law of Electronic Media (LEM) is one of a cluster of intellectual property courses including Copyright, Cyberspace Law Seminar, First Amendment seminars, Entertainment Law, Patents and Trademarks, and Sports Law -- among others. (None is a prerequisite.)
Assignments: See the posted assignment for August 23, the related discussion questions contained in the syllabus, and the personal bio assignment due August 29. It is strongly recommended, if you have not already read it, that you read “So You Want to be a Lawyer: A Play in Four Acts,” available on the Web from http://www.nicholasjohnson.org under “Writing.”
Exams, Grades: To provide the instructor and students with feedback and incentives, there may be (with advance notice) brief quizzes. The final is currently scheduled for Wednesday, December 13, 2000, at 8:30 a.m. (It is, of course, your responsibility to confirm time and place as the day approaches.) The final will be a two hour (total) (a) closed book short answer or multiple-choice exam followed by (b) an open book essay exam. Ten percent of the grade will be based on class participation.
Attendance: You are urged to make the effort to be prepared for, attend, and participate in every class. The ABA, AALS and College of Law rules require students to be in "regular attendance." For this course, "regular attendance" will be 75 per cent (11 of the 14 class sessions). You are encouraged to save the permitted absences for any emergencies at the end of the semester as participants attending less than 11 class sessions (whether excused or unexcused) may be dropped.
Reservation: An effort will be made to provide advance notice of assignments and exams, respond to reasonable suggestions, and minimize changes. But the instructor reserves the right to make changes believed to be of benefit to students.
One of the greatest resources of any law school is the intellectual quality, and diversity of background and experience, of its student body. We are particularly blessed at Iowa in that respect. The more we can all know about each other, and the resources we bring to the classroom, the more each of us can take from it. Besides, it's more fun knowing who these folks are with whom you are about to be locked in a room for 14 evenings.
So, please hand in (to Jessie Kriebs, Room 433) by August 29 a brief, one-page essay about yourself that can be shared with other members of the class. You need not, but may, examine examples in bio booklets from past classes, available from Ms. Kriebs. We'll put together a comparable one for our class, make copies, and give you one.
Obviously, if there is anything you want to keep to yourself you are a skillful enough writer to do so. There's nothing you must include.
But while you wait for the muse to strike, be aware that the following kinds of things would be interesting and useful: (1) something of your family, community and upbringing, (2) early ambitions, goals or professional interests, (3) college majors, intellectual interests, activities, (4) work, travel or other job related experiences, (5) your current obligations and environment outside of law school (e.g., marital and parental status or other family responsibilities, nature and demands of outside employment, hobbies or other activities), (6) areas of specialization in law school, student activities, or legal internships, (7) any experiences working for (or dealing with) print or electronic media, advertising, or political campaigning, (8) future goals, expectations and plans for using your legal education, (9) electronics hobbies (e.g., amateur radio license, computers).
Format Request. Please use (1) one page maximum,
(2) single spaced, (3) using a computer printer or typewriter that creates
copy sufficiently dark to make machine copies possible, (3) one inch (or
greater) margins all around, (4) a heading that includes your name, date,
and “Personal Bio,” (5) any reasonable font.
Week | Date | Chapter | Title/Subject | Pages |
1 | August 23 | 14 | Privacy | 817-866 |
2
|
August 30
|
2
1
|
Introduction: Broadcast History, Technology, Agencies
The Spectrum and Its Utilization Introduction/Administrative Law "Concepts, Perspectives and Goals" Recommended: Encarta, "Broadcasting: Radio and Television" (Microsoft) |
42-70
35-41 memo** CD-ROM |
3 | September 6 | 1 | Introduction: The First Amendment | 11-34 |
4 | September 13 | 1 | First Amendment | 11-34 |
5 | September 20 | 13 | Defamation | 754-816 |
6 | September 27 | 12 | Copyright and Trademark | 705-753 |
7 | October 4
|
15
6 |
Special Problems/Public Sources
Legal Control/Obscenity, Indecency |
906-922
222-251 271-282 |
8
|
October 11
|
6
6 6 10 |
Legal Control/Obscenity, Indecency, continued
Legal Control/Safety Legal Control/Drugs New Tech/Interactive/Safety |
271-282
282-289 218-222 598-600 |
9 | October 18 | 3 | Justifications for Regulation | 71-99 |
10 | October 25 | 5 | Legal Control/Political Speech | 169-217 |
11 | November 1 | 8 | Structural Regulation of Cable | 403-458 |
12 | November 8 | 9 | Content Regulation of Cable | 459-525 |
13 | November 15 | 11 | Media Concentration/National | 633-663 |
14 | November 22 | 14 | No class; Thanksgiving holiday | |
15 | November 29 | Catch up/Review/Dinner |
_______________
* These assignments are, of course,
"subject to change" -- including changes proposed by you that (a) reflect
your preferences and are (b) rational, and (c) supported by a significant
proportion of your colleagues. Because of possible slippage from week to
week, if you miss a class it is best to confirm the next week's assignment
with a classmate. For now, this is my current best effort at a reasonable
inclusion/exclusion of material and its ordering.
** This memo
is available online and in hard copy from Ms. Kriebs (Room 433).
As you know from the posted assignment sheet, Wednesday evening we will be discussing the "privacy" material, chapter 14, pp. 817-866.
In preparing yourself to comprehend and discuss this material, keep the following (illustrative, not exhaustive) questions/issues in mind:
Finally -- or, perhaps, first -- it is important to be able to feel, as well as to intellectualize, what these cases are about. In "actors' studio" fashion, try to recall an instance in which you thought your privacy was inappropriately compromised. What were your feelings at that time? Why is this understanding important to your comprehension of privacy law?
Prior to/without regard to "media," and without regard to newer technologies (such as the Internet), what are the contexts in which the law has recognized a right of "privacy" and some examples of each?
What is it precisely/how would you describe the nature of the interest that the law is protecting in these cases (e.g., is the trespass relevant in the privacy trespass cases; and, by contrast, how is "privacy" relevant to the Onassis and kidnapping cases on p. 824)?
How would you go about the task of figuring out what is a "reasonable expectation of privacy"? What factors might modify that expectation from one context/person/time to another? Do you agree with the Dietemann court, p. 830, that we "should not be required to take the risk" of recording? (p. 831)
Where did "for advertising purposes, or the purposes of trade" come from? Is it an accident of history or a rational standard? How does the right protected differ from colloquial "privacy"?
What are the implications of "privacy law" for the news media? What considerations do the media bring to the balance? Are ethical/professional standards enough, or do we need "law"? Are there categories of facts that should not be published under any/most circumstances? Why?
What are some of the technologies available today with
privacy implications? Do they create a unique set of new issues/problems,
or are they merely extensions/applications of the old ones?