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Amélie Heldt studied French and German Law at the universities of Paris Ouest Nanterre and Potsdam. After passing the first state examination, she completed a supplementary training programme in Design Thinking at the Hasso-Plattner-Institut in Potsdam and worked in the legal department of a market-leading music label. She completed her two-year legal clerkship at the superior Court of Justice in Berlin and was working amongst others for the Stiftung Oper in Berlin (Berlin Opera Foundation), in the media and copyright area of the law firm Raue LLP and for the GIZ (German development agency) in Cambodia.
Since May 2017, she is a junior researcher and Ph.D. candidate within Research Programme 1 “Transformation of Public Communication” at the Hans-Bredow-Institute. In her Ph.D. project, Amélie Heldt focuses on the effect of the fundamental right on freedom of expression in the digital sphere.
Titled: "The difficulty of regulating fake news" and "Chers voisins d’outre-Rhin: A french NetzDG?" Amélie published two articles about the French regulatory situation regarding fake news, and one more on political micro-targeting which is all mentioned during the interview. (all articles are written in German)
Clara is a Public Law Doctoral Candidate at the Rio de Janeiro State University – UERJ. She holds a Master of Public Law diploma from the same University and an L.LM in IT, Media and Communications Law from the London School of Economics and Political Science. At the HIIG, she is focused on the regulation of online service providers, specifically regarding the combination of internet governance principles with regulatory strategies and rationales (the subject of her Doctoral thesis). She is also interested in e-governments, digital administrative law and the shaping of democratic institutions in the face of technology in general.
Clara wrote on the blog of the HIIG a detailed article on the fake news during the Brazilian elections.
Besides fake news, Clara and Amélie talk about media and information quality in an age of artificial intelligence. You can read more about this in an article from the Berkman Klein Center at Harvard University.
By Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society (HIIG)Amélie Heldt studied French and German Law at the universities of Paris Ouest Nanterre and Potsdam. After passing the first state examination, she completed a supplementary training programme in Design Thinking at the Hasso-Plattner-Institut in Potsdam and worked in the legal department of a market-leading music label. She completed her two-year legal clerkship at the superior Court of Justice in Berlin and was working amongst others for the Stiftung Oper in Berlin (Berlin Opera Foundation), in the media and copyright area of the law firm Raue LLP and for the GIZ (German development agency) in Cambodia.
Since May 2017, she is a junior researcher and Ph.D. candidate within Research Programme 1 “Transformation of Public Communication” at the Hans-Bredow-Institute. In her Ph.D. project, Amélie Heldt focuses on the effect of the fundamental right on freedom of expression in the digital sphere.
Titled: "The difficulty of regulating fake news" and "Chers voisins d’outre-Rhin: A french NetzDG?" Amélie published two articles about the French regulatory situation regarding fake news, and one more on political micro-targeting which is all mentioned during the interview. (all articles are written in German)
Clara is a Public Law Doctoral Candidate at the Rio de Janeiro State University – UERJ. She holds a Master of Public Law diploma from the same University and an L.LM in IT, Media and Communications Law from the London School of Economics and Political Science. At the HIIG, she is focused on the regulation of online service providers, specifically regarding the combination of internet governance principles with regulatory strategies and rationales (the subject of her Doctoral thesis). She is also interested in e-governments, digital administrative law and the shaping of democratic institutions in the face of technology in general.
Clara wrote on the blog of the HIIG a detailed article on the fake news during the Brazilian elections.
Besides fake news, Clara and Amélie talk about media and information quality in an age of artificial intelligence. You can read more about this in an article from the Berkman Klein Center at Harvard University.

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