Students considering the course often ask about the syllabus of readings. Some background is necessary in order to appreciate why there is no precise or salient answer.
This course is about three intertwined questions:
Readings are relevant to those inquiries, but they are not primary. The primary materials of the course are our discussion in class and our writings here. I draw upon a large number of possible readings each year, in a collection and sequence determined not by a pre-conceived "syllabus," but rather (given certain starting points), by the needs the conversation and student writings reveal. For illustrative purposes only, and without any commitment to the use of the same selection of materials in the same order, here are some of the readings we used during Spring 2012:
All readings are made freely available on the Web, giving us the flexibility we need in order to adapt our reading to our thinking, rather than the other way around. Our own writings are more important to our learning process than other peoples' writings, just as our own lives as lawyers are more important than the decisions of cases, the contents of regulations, or the bloviations of law professors.
Students considering this course should also read the EvaluationPolicy in effect in all my courses.
-- EbenMoglen - 30 Oct 2012