
I frequently speak and teach about copyright & information policy for libraries, creators, and public interest organizations.
I’ve been speaking & teaching about technology (“how to telnet! what is the Internet?”) since the early 1990s, law since the early 2000s (“copyright for artists”, “what is fair use”, “library privacy issues”, etc.), and feminist SF, wikipedia, and various other topics intermittently.
I’m migrating course materials to a website, teaching.lquilter.net. If you are interested in the material and it’s not yet available, feel free to contact me about it.
- Speaking engagements
- about law & access to information (2000-present)
- about Internet skills & technology (1991-2005 or so)
- feminist science fiction or other topics (occasionally)
- Classes taught:
- Intellectual Freedom – Simmons University, graduate library science class
- Copyright, Computers, & Criminal Law – UMass undergraduate legal studies
- Owning Property – UMass undergraduate legal studies
- Politics of Information Access (1997, UIC undergraduate seminar) (This was a terribly designed class by an extremely novice instructor; but the topic was so interesting that the students really got into it. I moved mid-way through this class and my wonderful colleague Veronda Pitchford finished it off for me. I’d love to resurrect this some time!)
lquilter@lquilter.net
+1 DO-NOT-CALL