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Finally, a university ranking table worth topping

15 June, 200715 June, 2007
| No Comments
| Universities

THES logo via THES siteGiven the furore that often attends university rankings, here’s what ought to be an uncontroversial table in which every university ought to seek to do well. The Times Higher Education Supplement (THES) and the people & planet campaign have come together to rank the UK’s universities according to their environment performance. In the light of our new government, I wonder how Irish universities might fare on a similar assessment (my employer, TCD, has its green pages here).

People & Planet logo via p&p siteFrom the THES story by Rebecca Attwood:

Leeds Met tops first UK green rankings

Universities are ranked according to their environmental performance for the first time in a new “green” league table.

Published exclusively in The Times Higher to coincide with World Environment Day, the Green League 2007 aims to applaud progress and expose inaction, according to the student campaign group People & Planet, which compiled the data in part by using the Freedom of Information Act.

The table, which ranks universities based on factors such as their record on recycling, CO2 emissions and in purchasing renewable energy, declares Leeds Metropolitan University the UK’s “greenest“.

A total of 15 universities gain a “first”, with a score of 40/50 or above.

…

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Watching Your Every Move

14 June, 200723 November, 2010
| 5 Comments
| advertising, Digital Rights, Privacy

New York Times logo, via the NYT siteI don’t usually do this, but an Editorial in yesterday’s New York Times (13 June 2007; sub req’d) is so important, and so perfectly reflects my views, that it’s worth reproducing in full (in fact, I wish I’d written it). The headline is the title to this post: “Watching Your Every Move”, and the strapline on the electronic front page makes the point perfectly:

Privacy is too important to leave up to the companies that benefit financially from collecting and retaining data.

The Editorial itself ran as follows:

Watching Your Every Move

Internet users are abuzz over Google’s new Street View feature, which displays ground-level photos of urban blocks that in some cases even look through the windows of homes. If that feels like Big Brother, consider the reams of private information that Google collects on its users every day through the search terms they enter on its site.

…

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That was the week that was

13 June, 200723 November, 2010
| No Comments
| Censorship, Digital Rights, Freedom of Expression, IFCO, Irish Society, Privacy

Over the last week or so, there have been some interesting developments on issues that have recently been the subjects of posts on this blogs.

Below the fold: censorship and freedom of expression (online, and in respect of films), privacy (online resources, and google), and the celtic tiger (for the hell of it). …

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Why educate law students?

12 June, 20075 April, 2008
| 3 Comments
| Law, Legal Education, Universities

Scales, from Glesner's page on Law School and StressThis post title is the potential cue for every bad lawyer joke you’ve ever told, or for every bad lawyer cartoon you’ve ever seen; don’t worry, I’ve heard or seen them all – it’s an occupational hazard. But following on from my last post about the current state of education inspired by the Times Higher Education Supplement (THES), I couldn’t let pass without comment a story on the website of Chronicle of Higher Education (the US equivalent of the THES). The piece is here (sub req’d) and here (= hat tip: Mirror of Justice). From the Chronicle piece:

The Corrosive Effects of Law School

Chronicle of Higher Education Online
June 8, 2007

A glance at the current issue of Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin: The maddening effects of law school

Research suggests that law school has a corrosive effect on the well-being, values, and motivation of students, say Kennon M. Sheldon, an associate professor of psychology at the University of Missouri at Columbia, and Lawrence S. Krieger, a law professor at Florida State University. “Indeed, the emotional distress of law students appears to significantly exceed that of medical students and at times approach that of psychiatric populations,” they write.

…

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Why educate?

12 June, 200713 June, 2007
| No Comments
| Universities

Cover of 'Education make you fick, innit?' via the publishers' websiteA pretty basic question, it would seem, for and from an academic, in quest for answers to which I regularly read the Times Higher Education Supplement (THES). This week’s has an entertaining piece by Gary Day headlined “Oi Ofsted, leave them kids alone” (available here (THES; sub req’d) and here), reviewing Martin Allen and Patrick Ainley Education Make you Fick, Innit? (The Tufnell Press, 2007). The Introduction is available to download here here (pdf). The subtitle, “What’s gone wrong in England’s schools, colleges and universities and how to start putting it right”, pretty much explains the book. …

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A true verdict, according to the evidence

7 June, 200722 June, 2007
| 4 Comments
| Freedom of Expression, Privacy

Gavel, via Concurring OpinionsSo, according to the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania (pdf), the First Amendment to the US Constitution requires public disclosure of jurors’ names (Concurring Opinions | CrimProf Blog; see generally Raskopf 17 Pepp L Rev 357 (1990); Litt 25 Colum J L & Soc Probs 371 (1992); Zanzberg (2000); Rousseau 3(2) Rutgers Journal of Law & Urban Policy (2006)). To my ears, this sounds like the premise for a John Grisham novel. On the other hand, revealing the identity of a juror in Australia would be a criminal offence (Freedom to Differ) (a clause just crying out for a movie like The Castle). In Pennsylvania v Long (31 May 2007) the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania held:

Taking in mind the tradition of accessibility, as well as the competing values of openness versus the promotion of jury service, the conclusion is inescapable. We believe the First Amendment provides a qualified right of access to jurors’ names, but not addresses. In this way, the public will be provided with enough information to confirm the identity of jurors when necessary. Disclosing jurors’ names furthers the objective of a fair trial to the defendant and gives assurances of fairness to society as a whole.

…

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Couriers, Communication and the Irish Constitution

6 June, 200723 June, 2011
| 2 Comments
| Competition Law, Freedom of Expression

An Post logo via the An Post siteLet me take you back to a time in which the market for delivery of letters was dominated by large national monopolies or former monopolies, and impatient potential entrants worried the incumbents. Oh wait; that’s today. Postal workers in various EU countries, unhappy at European plans (existing legislation here) to attain greater liberalisation in the postal market, held scattered strikes in Ireland, Belgium and Hungary, though there was little strike activity in France, and none at all in Germany, Poland and the UK.

Cover of Irish ConstitutionBut that’s also Ireland of the early 1980s, when a company called Paperlink sought to run a letter delivery service in Dublin. This contravened the Post Office’s monopoly on letter delivery conferred by section 34(2) of the Post Office Act, 1908; and in AG v Paperlink Ltd [1983] IEHC 1; [1984] ILRM 373 (15th July 1983) Costello J held that this monopoly did not infringe Paperlink’s constitutional right to communicate. The effects of his analysis, baleful for most of its existence but now pregnant with positive possibility, are the focus of my paper at this weekend’s conference on The Constitution at 70 (website | brochure (pdf)) organized by colleagues at the School of Law, TCD.…

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Is it ok to share wi-fi?

6 June, 200731 July, 2018
| 9 Comments
| Blogging, Contract, Irish Law, Irish Society, Media and Communications

That is a question posed by Kris Nelson on his blog, in propria persona. As usual, the answer is that “it depends”. I’ve already had a look at the issue from the perspective of potential criminal or civil liability if a user’s wifi is shared by a third party; and Daithí­ has taken the discussion several steps further. Now, Kris adds an additional consideration, directing the analysis to the terms of any contract between the ISP and the customer: …

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Welcome

Me in a hat

Hi there! Thanks for dropping by. I’m Eoin O’Dell, and this is my blog: Cearta.ie – the Irish for rights.


“Cearta” really is the Irish word for rights, so the title provides a good sense of the scope of this blog.

In general, I write here about private law, free speech, and cyber law; and, in particular, I write about Irish law and education policy.


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