Request for Doctoral Faculty Participants for a Study
I just received ethical approval to begin collecting data for a small research project I am working on while en route toward my PhD, and I am inviting potential participants to consider being interviewed for my work. My research is entitled "Faculty Support: Doctoral Students, Threshold Concepts, and Technology Enhanced Learning," and I am looking for faculty members who supervise / tutor / mentor doctoral students, and who have supported these students during periods of significant perspective / ontological / epistemological / worldview change as a result of their studies, to consider participating in my small research project. If you are interested in learning more about this project, you can find the problem, purpose, and research question listed here: http://silenceandvoice.com/archives/2010/06/11/request-for-doctoral-faculty-... Please let me know if you or anybody you know are interested in learning more about or participating in my research. Thank you. ----- Jeffrey Keefer j.keefer@lancaster.ac.uk Blog: http://silenceandvoice.com Twitter: http://twitter.com/JeffreyKeefer Website: http://www.jeffreykeefer.com LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/jeffreykeefer
Please see below the details on a new book on domain name regulation. ---------------------------------------------- Routledge have just published the following book which you may find of interest. It is available now from all good bookstores, or direct from our website. The Current State of Domain Name Regulation Domain Names as Second Class Citizens in a Mark-dominated World By Konstantinos Komaitis In this book Konstantinos Komaitis identifies a tripartite problem intellectual, institutional and ethical inherent in the domain name regulation culture. Using the theory of property, Komaitis discusses domain names as sui generis e-property¹ rights and analyses the experience of the past ten years, through the Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy (UDRP) and the Anticybersquatting Consumer Protection Act (ACPA). The institutional deficit he identifies, generates a further discussion on the ethical dimensions in the regulation of domain names and prompts Komaitis to suggest the creation of an environment based on justice. The relationship between trademarks and domain names has always been contentious and the existing institutions of the UDRP and ACPA have not assisted in alleviating the tension between the two identifiers. Over the past ten years, the trademark community has been systematic in encouraging and promoting a culture that indiscriminately considers domain names as secondclass citizens, suggesting that trademark rights should have priority over the registration in the domain name space. Komaitis disputes this assertion and brings to light the injustices and the trademark-oriented nature of the UDRP and ACPA. He queries what the appropriate legal source to protect registrants when not seeking to promote trademark interests is. He also delineates a legal hypothesis on their nature as well as the steps of their institutionalisation process that we need to reverse, seeking to create a just framework for the regulation of domain names. Finally he explores how the current policies contribute to the philosophy of domain names as second-class citizens. With these questions in mind, Komaitis suggests some recommendations concerning the reconfiguration of the regulation of domain names. June 2010: 296pp HB: 978-0-415-47776-5: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-84958-3 For more information including a table of contents, or to order your copy, please visit http://www.routledge.com/9780415477765 <http://www.routledge.com/9780415477765> Many thanks for your time, -- Dr. Konstantinos Komaitis, Lecturer in Law, GigaNet Membership Chair, University of Strathclyde, The Lord Hope Building, 141 St. James Road, Glasgow, G4 0LT, UK tel: +44 (0)141 548 4306 email: k.komaitis@strath.ac.uk
participants (2)
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Jeffrey Keefer -
Konstantinos Komaitis