Law & Order | Coulomb's law | Harvard Law School | Statute Law Revision Act 1948 | Law & Order: Special Victims Unit | law | Yale Law School | media | Law | Statute Law Revision Act 1888 | New York University School of Law | Pitchfork Media | law clerk | Jude Law | social media | University of Michigan Law School | Columbia Law School | L.A. Law | Mass media | Roman law | Law & Order: Criminal Intent | international law | Frederick Law Olmsted | English law | Attorney at law | Statute Law Revision Act 1863 | Bill (proposed law) | mass media | Law of the United States | Virgin Media |
Andrei Richter is the director of the Office of the OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media, director and founder of the Moscow Media Law and Policy Institute, and Professor at the School of journalism, Lomonosov Moscow State University (teaching and doing research on mass media law and international journalism).
Thomas Hoeren (born on August 22, 1961 in Dinslaken) is a German law professor and judge with focus on Information and Media Law.
She practiced law in Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy's Intellectual Property/Litigation Group before moving to Frankfurt Kurnit Klein & Selz, an entertainment and media law firm in New York City.
He teaches in the fields of international trade law, communications and art law, European and global media law and the sociology of law at the University of Lucerne, lectures on audiovisual services in the MILE program of the World Trade Institute, and is a recognized expert in the field of audio-visual services.
Barber trained as an entertainment lawyer at media law firm Harbottle & Lewis where he acted for a clients including Sir Roger Moore.
Also overseen by the Ministry of Information, Posts and Telecommunication, the consultative meeting was held at the Aden Adde International Airport and attended by over 30 Somali media organizations, international media law experts, publishers and NGOs.
In the case of Ryan Hart vs. Electronic Arts, the OTW (in combination with the Digital Media Law Project and the International Documentary Association) submitted a brief arguing that Electronic Arts's use of factual information, (such as the height, weight, and jersey number of football players) in creative works (in this case, video games) is protected by the First Amendment.
He has also taught comparative media law at the University of Aberdeen, Scotland, Cyber law at The University of Netherland, Antilles in Curacao, and U.S. Constitutional and copyright law at Shandong University, China.