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Please join us for an exciting upcoming event.

About Us
The UNC Center for Media Law and Policy is an interdisciplinary research center run jointly out of the UNC School of Law and UNC School of Media and Journalism.  The Center serves as a forum for study and debate about the broad array of media law and policy issues facing North Carolina, the nation, and the world. The Center’s work ranges from the legal and policy issues affecting traditional media organizations to the challenges posed by new communication technologies, including social media, the Internet, and mobile technology, and the impact they are having on governments, on the economy, and on cultural and social values throughout the world.

medialaw.unc.edu
@uncmedialaw

Contact Us
Prof. David Ardia, co-director
ardia@email.unc.edu
Twitter: @dsardia


Dr. Tori Ekstrand, co-director
torismit@email.unc.edu
Twitter: @vekstra

Shao Chengyuan, outreach coordinator
shaocy@live.unc.edu


Mailing Address
UNC Center for Media Law and Policy
University of North Carolina
Campus Box 3365
Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3365

Government Transparency in the Age of Social Media: First Amendment and Good Governance Issues


Date/Time
Date -2/15/19
12:00 pm - 1:15 pm

Location
Faculty Lounge, UNC School of Law


On Friday, Feb. 15, the UNC Center for Media Law and Policy will host an interdisciplinary lunch with Professor Frayda Bluestein, David M. Lawrence Distinguished Professor of Public Law and Government in the UNC School of Government. Professor Bluestein will lead a discussion about government transparency in the age of social media.

The use of social media by elected officials is on the rise, prompting new and untested legal questions about how and whether such posts fall under public meetings or records laws. In this talk, Professor Bluestein will focus on several key inquiries: When is the government engaged in government speech, and when has the government created a forum for citizen expression? When does public official use of social media fall under North Carolina transparency (public records and open meetings) laws?

Frayda Bluestein joined the School of Government (then the Institute of Government) in 1991. From 2006 to 2017 she served as the School’s associate dean for faculty development. Prior to joining the School, she worked in private law practice, focusing primarily on municipal and land use law, and for one year in the Legislative Drafting Division of the North Carolina General Assembly. Her publications include books and articles about local government structure and authority, public contracting, conflicts of interest, and transparency laws. She is a frequent contributor to the School’s Coates’ Canons: NC Local Government Law blog, writing on topics including North Carolina local government authority, annexation, public records, open meetings, conflicts of interest, and First Amendment issues affecting local government.

Professor Bluestein was awarded the School of Government’s two-year professorship for outstanding junior faculty achievement in 1998, the two-year professorship for teaching excellence in 2004, and the David M. Lawrence Distinguished Professorship in 2014. In 2016, Bluestein was honored with the Grainger Barrett Award for Excellence from the Government and Public Sector Section of the North Carolina Bar Association and the Ernest H. Ball Award for Excellence in Municipal Law from the North Carolina Association of Municipal Attorneys. Bluestein earned a BA from the University of California at Berkeley and a JD from the University of California at Davis.

February’s lunch discussion will be held from noon to 1:15 pm on Friday, Feb. 15 at the UNC School of Law Faculty Lounge. The Center will provide lunch to those who RSVP here by noon on Wed., Feb. 13.

Background readings:

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UNC Center for Media Law and Policy · University of North Carolina · Campus Box 3365 · Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3365 · USA

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