Acknowledgments
We are tremendously grateful to the Ludovika University of Public Service in Budapest (LUPS), whose financial support allowed this volume to be published in open-access format. In addition, the book benefitted immensely from a series of conferences at which contributing authors could meet in person to workshop drafts of their chapters. These workshops were hosted by the Columbia University Global Freedom of Expression Project with support from the University of Alabama School of Law; the Southeastern Association of Law Schools (SEALS) annual conference; and the LUPS’s Information Society Project. For their logistical and moral support, we are especially grateful to Hawley Johnson, Associate Director of the Columbia University Global Freedom of Expression Project, Bernát Török, Director of the Institute of the Information Society at LUPS, and Russell L. Weaver, Executive Director of SEALS.