This article analyzes whether the technical characteristics of the Internet should create a separate legal jurisdiction, and if a separate jurisdiction would be beneficial to the Internet. http://www.ascusc.org/jcmc/vol2/issue1/juris.html
Paper prepared by the Uniform Law Conference of Canada that discusses issues relating to courts' jurisdiction over cases arising from Internet use, and briefly addresses the constitutional question of who may regulate the Internet. http://www.law.ualberta.ca/alri/ulc/current/ejurisd.htm
Analysis of both cases finding or refusing jurisdiction on the basis of Internet contacts, from the law firm of Satterlee Stephens Burke and Burke LLP. http://www.ssbb.com/what.html
Analysis of criteria which enable a State to prescribe rules for cyberspace, to subject violators of these rules to the process of its courts, and to enforce these rules. http://www.law.indiana.edu/fclj/pubs/v50/no1/wilske.html