SWLAW Blog | Entertainment & Media Law

October 28, 2021
Journal of International Media & Entertainment Law Publishes Volume 9, Issue 2
The Journal of International Media & Entertainment Law is pleased to announce the publication of Volume 9, Issue 2. JIMEL is the scholarly journal of the Biederman Institute, published in association with the American Bar Association鈥檚 Forum on Communications Law and the ABA鈥檚 Forum on the Entertainment and Sports Industries.

This new issue contains four articles that run the gamut of domestic, international and comparative law; articles with innovative scholarship and fresh perspectives as the world slowly emerges from the calamity of the Covid-19 pandemic. Professor Michael M. Epstein, JIMEL鈥檚 supervising editor, expressed gratitude to the students who helped ready this faculty-edited publication ready for release. 鈥淭hese Southwestern students, led by 3L鈥檚 Abigail M. Lombardo and Martha M. Vasquez, deserve praise for their can-do attitude in the face of public health restrictions that required them to work mostly from home,鈥 says Professor Epstein, who has been with the journal since its inception.
In 鈥Antitrust Confronts Big Data: U.S. and European Perspectives,鈥 Warren Grimes offers a comparative look at regulatory initiatives being taken against Alphabet (Google), Amazon, Apple, and Facebook in the U.S. and Europe. A leading scholar of antitrust law, Grimes is the Irving D. & Florence Rosenberg Professor of Law here at 黑人探花.
In 鈥The Audience Problem in Online Speech Crimes,鈥 Janny H. C. Leung creatively applies law and social scientific research developed during the distributor-controlled mass communication era to digital audiences in an online environment. Leung is professor of applied linguistics and Director of the Program in Law and Literary Studies at Hong Kong University.
Authors Amy Kristin Sanders and William D. Kosinski posit an 鈥渦nraveling鈥 of FOIA rights as a result of third-party interventions approved by the U.S. Supreme Court in 鈥Fixing FOIA: How Third-Party Intervention Thwarts Transparency.鈥 Sanders is a media law scholar and professor of journalism at the University of Texas; Kosinski is a graduate of the University.
Finally, Russell L. Weaver, a distinguished professor at the University of Louisville, Louis D. Brandeis School of Law, develops a novel piece of academic literature in 鈥Fake News and the Covid-19 Pandemic.鈥 Weaver looks at the implications of misinformation as it relates to the global pandemic and possible solutions that would require the courts, legislature, and private social media companies to take action.
Printed copies of the current issue, and back issues, can be obtained by emailing institute@swlaw.edu
Find the latest issue of Southwestern's Journal of International Media and Entertainment Law posted on our website on the JIMEL page.