Berkman represents a network of faculty, fellows, students, entrepreneurs, lawyers, and virtual architects working to identify and engage with the challenges and opportunities of cyberspace.
As assistant director, Sylvie Agudelo oversees all administrative, financial, personnel, facilities, strategic planning and managerial aspects of the Berkman Center.
Juliet Armstrong was a software engineer and worked on the H20 Project.
Tim Armstrong was the Assistant Director of the Berkman Center’s Clinical Program in Cyberlaw.
Derek is an Assistant Professor of Law at Wayne State University Law School. From 2004 through 2006, Derek Bambauer was a resident fellow at the Center, where he worked primarily with the OpenNet Initiative, helping its research on Internet filtering, but maintained ties from his student days with the Digital Media Team.
Rebecca Brackley was an LLM candidate at Harvard Law School. She is particularly interested in intellectual property issues in cyberspace, including the intersection of constitutional law and intellectual property.
Mary previously served as Communications Coordinator, working on a variety of Berkman Center projects, particularly those involving writing and communications.
Prior to joining Schrödinger, Justin practiced law at the New York Office of Debevoise & Plimpton LLP, was a Resident Fellow at the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School and clerked for Chief Justice Yong of the Singapore Supreme Court.
Tuna is a fellow at the Berkman Center and a Staff Attorney with the Citizen Media Law Project, which provides legal education and resources for individuals and organizations involved in citizen media.
Chris Conley was Fellow at the Berkman Center working with the OpenNet Initiative.
Rosemary J. Coombe was a Fellow at the Berkman Center, where she worked on Chilling Effects and other IP-related projects.
Mike Deehan is the multimedia production coordinator at the Berkman Center.
Ashish worked on the StopBadware.org project while at the Berkman Center.
Technical Analyst (May 1998 - Sept. 2002), Student Fellow (Sept. 2002 - Jan. 2004)
Bonnie Emerick is on the English Department faculty at Western State College in Gunnison, CO. She holds an MFA from Colorado State University and a bachelor's in magazine journalism from Ohio University.
Professor Tamar Frankel has written and taught in the areas of mutual funds, securitization, financial system regulation, fiduciary law and corporate governance.
Shenja van der Graaf was a fellow at the Berkman Center for Internet and Society and the Research Center for Information Law at the University of St. Gallen (2007-2008). Her research focused on the organization and management of innovation and technology, especially user innovation, product development, and media uses in 3D media/software industries.
David Halperin was a Fellow at the Berkman Center in 1997.
Jackie Harlow is an affiliate of the Berkman Center who worked on the Digital Media Project while a student at Harvard Law School.
Paul Hoffert was a Faculty Fellow at the Berkman Center, where he worked on Noank Media and the Digital Media Project.
At the Berkman Center Blythe coordinated a project exploring Digital Media in Cyberspace, in conjunction with Gartner|G2, the business strategy research arm for Gartner, Inc.
Rohan has studied at Harvard Law School as a Berkman Fellow, the University of Kent at Canterbury, the University of Geneva, Switzerland, the College of Law in London, and the Centre for Commercial Law Studies at Queen Mary University of London. In 2001, he was awarded a Fulbright Scholarship to Harvard.
Bruce Keller was a Fellow and Co-Director of the Berkman Center's Clinical Program.
Molly Krause was the Project Leader for H2O -- an open source, educational platform that explores powerful ways to connect professors, students, and researchers online
Jack was Research Fellow at the Berkman Center, where he worked to develop a nonprofit digital music distribution system modeled after proposals to reform the current entertainment industry and intellectual property system via collective licensing and revenue-pooling regimes.
A long-time Filter reader and Berkman Center admirer, Isaac attended BCIS's ILAW 2001 conference in July of 2001 where he solidified his interest in cyberlaw and the Berkman Center. When Isaac returned to Cambridge to begin his studies at HLS as a 1L that fall, he got involved with several Berkman Center projects.
Eric Liftin is an Affiliate of the Berkman Center
Susie Lindsay is currently regulatory counsel at Bell Canada Enterprises Inc. in Toronto - where she practices broadcasting, telecommunications and copyright law.
Renee Lloyd is a Fellow in the Clinical Program at the Berkman Center.
Matt Lovell was a Clinical Fellow and Assistant Director of the Clinical Program at the Berkman Center.
Alexander Macgillivray is Senior Product and Intellectual Property Counsel at Google.
Rebecca MacKinnon is a veteran journalist who has enthusiastically embraced the new world of weblogs and participatory media. She is co-founder with Berkman fellow Ethan Zuckerman of Global Voices Online, an international online citizens’ media project housed at the Berkman Center.
Catherine Manley worked as a research assistant to Lawrence Lessig, while he was writing his book Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace.
Ronald Mann was the Bruce W. Nichols Visiting Professor of Law at Harvard Law School in 2005.
Patrick previously served as the Berkman Center's Communications Coordinator, handling internal and external communications for the center, its fellows, and its projects.
Mr. Meister is a former Affiliate of the Harvard Law School Berkman Center for Internet and Society.
Talia worked with the Berkman Center for Internet & Society on questions of digital space and content and focused on education and the role of public/private spaces and institutions.
James (Jim) Moore was a Senior Fellow at the Berkman Center.
Rebecca Nesson is a Berkman Alumae and a Ph.D. candidate in Computational Linguistics at Harvard University.
Dotan taught a seven-meeting workshop and organized a reading group on economic analysis of intellectual property, was a teaching assistant for the Internet Law Colloquium, co-authored teaching modules for Berkman’s Internet Law Program, established Berkman’s Research Publication Series and participated in the institutional design of Creative ommons, a non-profit that enhances sharing and cumulative production of intellectual property.
Christina Olson was a fellow at Berkman Center and the Project Manager for StopBadware.
Eric Priest was a Resident Fellow overseeing the China implementation of the Noank Digital Media Exchange project, a next-generation copyright licensing system for the legal distribution and transmission of digital works over the Internet.
Jedediah Purdy joined the Duke Law faculty in 2004. He graduated from Harvard College, summa cum laude, with an A.B. in Social Studies, and received his J.D. from Yale Law School.
During the fall of 2001, Anita was a fellow at the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School.
Joseph Reagle was a Fellow at the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School
Ivan Reidel was a Student Fellow with the Berkman Center for Internet and Society and an SJD candidate at Harvard Law School.
Colin Rhinesmith is a Digital Media Producer for the Berkman Center. He produces audio and video projects for the Citizen Media Law Project.
Harvard Law School Lecturer on Law
Mary Rundle is a fellow with the Berkman Center and a non-resident fellow with the Center for Internet and Society at Stanford Law School. Through the Net Dialogue project, she has been mapping ways in which governments are working in international organizations to iron out common policies for the networked world.
David Russcol was a resident fellow at the Berkman Center working on the Citizen Media Law Project and Interoperability.
Pamela Samuelson is a Professor at the University of California at Berkeley with a joint appointment in the School of Information Management and Systems and the School of Law.
Henrik Schneider was a research fellow at the Berkman Center for Internet & Society in 2005.
Danny is in charge of the care and feeding of the various servers, desktops, and systems at Berkman and the software that runs on them.
Miriam coordinates research and education initiatives for the Digital Natives project.
Derek Slater was a fellow at the Berkman Center while a senior at Harvard College, focusing his efforts on the Digital Media Project.
Richard Sobel explores the relationships between citizens and governments as a Senior Research Associate in the Program in Psychiatry and the Law at Harvard Medical School, and a Senior Research Fellow and Policy Director at the Roper Center for Public Opinion Research in Storrs, CT.
Haochen Sun was a Berkman Center Fellow in 2006-2007 working on the Noank Digital Media Exchange project.
Talha Syed is a Berkman Alumni and an S.J.D. candidate at Harvard Law School.
Sarah Szalavitz is the co-founder of 7 Robot, a virtual industrial design company.
Henry Vehovec currently serves as Senior Vice President of Finance and Business Development for Noank Media.
Sally Walkerman is project coordinator for the OpenNet Initiative, where she works with ONI's many volunteers and contractors around the world to carry out ONI testing for Internet filtering. She also handles communications, directs local research assistants, conducts research and assists with reports.
Ben Weeks is a junior software developer at the Berkman Center. He is currently working on the StopBadware.org project.
Donna Wentworth was among the first staff members at the Berkman Center, joining what was then known as the "Center on Law and Technology" in 1997.
Winer spent one year as a resident fellow at the Harvard Law School's Berkman Center for Internet & Society where he worked on using weblogs in education. While there, he launched the Harvard Weblogs community using UserLand software, and held the first BloggerCon conferences. Winer's fellowship ended in June 2004.