57 Louis Pasteur Street
Ottawa, K1N 6N5
Canada
University of Ottawa - Common Law Section
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AI; technology-facilitated violence; technology-facilitated abuses; TFVA; TFV; deep fake; Canada; algorithmic profiling
Cyberbullying, Cyberviolence, Human Rights, Criminal Law, Education Law, Privacy
digital rights management, DRM, copyright law, privacy, freedom of expression
privacy, big data, education, teachers
Online social networking, equality, privacy, gender
stereotypical representations of girls, sexualized, social networking sites, studies, SNS , self-exposure
Cyberviolence, criminal law, human rights, feminism
teen, adolescent, sexting, Canada, sexting prosecutions, child pornography, Canada's child pornography provisions, sexualized self representation, law, unauthorized redistributions, child pornography
Access to justice, technology, law, cyberjustice, social justice
cyberbullying, online harassment, intimate images, policy
law, technology-facilitated gender based violence, non-consensual distribution of intimate images, NCDII, TFGBV, feminist, critical race theory, technology, violence, sexual violence, gender-based violence
cyberfeminism, legal education, feminist theory, communication technologies, technology impact on equality for women, legally regulate communication environments, internet
Surveillance, big data, feminism, equality, human rights, civil liberties, law
access to justice, public interest standing, Supreme Court of Canada, Chaoulli, Morgentaler, judicial decision making, judicial interpretation
internet, hate propaganda, first amendment US, freedom of expression, regulation, democracy
AB v Bragg, Supreme Court of Canada, pseudonym, identity, disclosure, online attacker, privacy, interests, victim, sexualized, online bullying, equality, discriminatory tropes, inequalities
Canadian jurisprudence, child pornography, children abused in production, hate propaganda, obscenity, privacy, inequality, equality-seeking communities, Oscar Gandy, Priscilla Regan, Julie Cohen
privacy, constitutional law, search and seizure, Canada, section 8, Charter, right against unreasonable search and seizure
Downtown Eastside Sex Workers United Against Violence, Sheryl Kiselbach, Supreme Court of Canada, access to justice, equality seeking groups, public interest standing, public interest standing test
child pornography, Canada, real children, imagination of real children, depictions of real children, virtual child pornography, Supreme Court of Canada and child pornographt, Sharpe, Langer
Privacy, Open Courts, Online Court Records
privacy, surveillance, sousveillance, personal experience capture, CARPE, life logging, webcam, EyeTap, glogging, Jennicam, reasonable expectation of privacy
private data, Canada, systematic access, bill c-30, access to personal information, telecommunication service providers, warrantless access
internet, women, access, discrimination, real space axes of discrimination, internet as communications medium, constitutional rights, restrict hate speech by government, equal access, government, online government service, e-government initiatives
privacy, case law on child pornography, child pornography, Canada, privacy and hate propaganda, privacy and obscenity, interests of accused, individualistic approach to privacy, social approaches to privacy, equality
unknown lands, public safety, globalization, law meets technology, dragon slayers, dragon tamers and dragon befrienders, globalization, technology, privacy seals, meaning of privacy, security dichotomy
access to legal education, access to legal profession, barriers to access, gender, identity and professionalism, women lawyers, first women lawyers, feminist perspectives
internet, regulation, internet regulation, Citron v. Zundel, Schnell v. Machiavelli Enterprize Inc, Reno v. A.C.L.U., freedom of expression, layered methodology
music recording industry, Canada, USA, copyright infringements, non-party disclosure, ISP, private information, rights, legal outcomes, law, copyright law
A.M., Kang Brown, Supreme Court of Canada, individual belongings, constitutional, police, sniffer dogs, privacy, common law, police powers, search powers, public safety, threats
bystander, intersectionality, violence prevention, universities, sexual violence, gender-based violence, post-secondary
Technology-Facilitated Violence, Technology-Facilitated Gender Based Violence, TFV, TFGBV, OGBV, Cyberbullying, Feminism, Human Rights, Police, Reporting, Social Media
Canada, government, Bill C-60, Act to Amend the Copyright Act, technological protection measures, TPM's, constitutional concerns, freedom of expression, Copyright Act, legislative protection, censorship, surveillance, protection, users, rights, legislation, access, information, economic interests
Supreme Court of Canada, Keegstra, Taylor, legislative restrictions, hate propaganda, Criminal Code, Canadian Human Rights Act, freedom of expression, constitutionally justified, technological changes, political changes, economic changes, scapegoating, abuse of vulnerable people, human rights
online media, girls, empower, online experiences, women, benefits, commercialism, surveillance, websites, youth, criminal policy dialogue, Canada, sexualized, policy, behaviour, stereotypes, commodification, girls sexuality
Jennicam, webcam girls, internet, gender, sexuality, feminism, Jennifer Ringley, identity, privacy, pornography, Anita Allen, lived social equality for women
paperless office, paperless technologies, telecommuting, normal, normal changing, women, workplace relations and women, modems, faxes, telephones