BILETA 2004: Out of the Box, Durham, England, 25-26
March 2004
By Ronan Deazley
The 19th annual BILETA Conference was held on 25th and 26th
March 2004. Hosted by the Institute for Commercial and Corporate
Law, a research centre within the Department of Law at the
University of Durham, the conference was convened at Collingwood
College, within the picturesque surrounding that is Durham City.
The Law Department itself is situated within the city on Owengate,
the main approach to Palace Green, which with its surrounding
buildings, including the Cathedral and Castle is a magnificent
UNESCO World Heritage Site. Conference delegates were especially
fortunate in that the Cathedral, recently voted Britain's favourite
building, provided the spectacular backdrop in playing host to this
year's conference dinner.
The theme for this year's conference, 'Out of the Box', offered
numerous resonances, invoking issues concerning the manner in which
recent technologies have moved beyond the traditional threshold of
the computer itself, the exponential growth of the digital
environment, and the social, legal and political strategies for
addressing the various Pandoran horrors (and gifts) such
developments promise to release. More importantly the conference
theme sought to throw open a challenge to the attending delegates
to consider creatively the manner in which to best navigate these
unsettled and unsettling times.
The two keynote presentations, both inspiring and entertaining
in equal measure certainly rose to this challenge. The first was
delivered by Prof Stephen Heppell, the Director of ULTRALAB, the
learning technology research centre based at the Chelmsford campus
of the Anglia Polytechnic University and Christchurch, New Zealand,
and offered an extremely interesting snapshot of some of the most
creative and innovative uses of learning technology within the
international arena. The second, delivered by Prof Colin Tapper, of
Magdalen College, Oxford, provided a tremendously insightful
whistle-stop tour of the history and development of electronic
retrieval of legal information, as well as proffering some possible
future directions within this field.
Apart from these keynote presentations, there were forty-five
papers presented from a truly international field, including papers
by legal academics, practitioners, librarians and members of the
judiciary from a range of diverse jurisdictions such as the US,
Chile, New Zealand, India, Malaysia, Egypt, Israel, Malta, Holland,
Norway, Sweden and Slovenia. These papers were given in streamed
sessions grouped under four broad themes: Education; Society and
the Individual; E-Commerce and Competition; and Intellectual
Property Rights. In addition, this year's conference saw a
considerable increase in papers of high quality from postgraduate
students, largely as a result of the instigation of the BILETA
Postgraduate Award Scheme. All forty-five papers will be made
available on the BILETA website in due course.
With in excess of one hundred delegates attending over the
course of both days of the conference, this year's turnout ensured
that all the conference streams were well attended, and that the
quality of discussion and debate throughout was high. Particularly
encouraging was the high level of first time attendees, something
which can hopefully be capitalised upon in successive conferences.
Moreover, feedback on these, and other aspects of the conference,
was almost universally positive. In particular, delegates
considered the conference good value for money and welcomed the
introduction of differentiated price bands for attendance.
The last word, of course, must be reserved for all those
individuals who worked to ensure that the event ran as smoothly as
possible. The contribution of the venue management staff and their
excellent support, both in terms of general management and the very
high quality of catering, should not go unremarked. Thanks are also
due to those who assisted in the planning stages, chaired sessions,
keynote speeches, and presented papers, and who otherwise
contributed to the conference throughout. In particular, special
thanks are due to Mrs Sheila Jobling, who handled all the
conference administration, and without whom the event would not
have been the success that it was. Thanks to one and all; I look
forward to seeing you all again next year.
Ronan Deazley is a lecturer in the Faculty of Law at the
University of Durham.
He can be reached at: < [email protected] >.
This is a Conference Report published on 30
April 2004.
Citation : Deazley, 'BILETA 2004: Out of the
Box, Durham, England, 25-26 March 2004 ', 2004
(1) The Journal of Information, Law and Technology (JILT).
<http://elj.warwick.ac.uk/jilt/04-1/deazley.html>. New
citation as at 15/06/04:
<http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/law/elj/jilt/2004_1/deazley/>.