Media Law and Policy in the Internet Age
Editat de Doreen Weisenhaus, Simon N M Youngen Limba Engleză Hardback – 22 feb 2017
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781782257400
ISBN-10: 1782257403
Pagini: 280
Dimensiuni: 169 x 244 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.68 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Hart Publishing
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1782257403
Pagini: 280
Dimensiuni: 169 x 244 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.68 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Hart Publishing
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Timely examination of appropriate regulation of the media and internet in the globalised society.
Notă biografică
Doreen Weisenhaus is Senior Lecturer at the Medill School of Journalism and Pritzker School of Law and Director, Media Law and Policy Initiative, Northwestern University.Simon N M Young is Professor and Associate Dean (Research) in the Faculty of Law at the University of Hong Kong. He is a practising barrister at Parkside Chambers and Co-Editor-in-Chief of the Asia-Pacific Journal on Human Rights and the Law.
Cuprins
Introduction Doreen Weisenhaus and Simon NM YoungPart A: Conceptual Perspectives of Media Law and Policy1. Defending Media Freedom in the Internet Age Peter Noorlander2. Advances in Open Justice in England and Wales Lord Dyson MR3. Free Speech, Reputation and Media Intrusion: Law Reform Now Lord Lester of Herne Hill KC4. Independence of the Press as a Constitutional Necessity Gillian PhillipsPart B: Media Law Reform and Defamation5. Rethinking Reynolds: Defending Public Interest Speech Andrew T Kenyon6. Defamation Law in Canada and England: Emerging Differences Paul Schabas and Adam Lazier7. The Internet and Politics in the Development of Hong Kong Defamation Law Rick Glofcheski8. China's Defamation Law: The Contest Between Criminal and Civil Defamation Law Xu Xun9. The Philippine Supreme Court on Cyber Libel: Lost in Overbreadth H Harry L Roque, Jr10. Confidentiality of Journalists' Sources in Singapore: Silence is Not Golden George HwangPart C: Legal Regulation of the Media and Internet11. Challenges for Communications in a Changing Legal Landscape Rolf H Weber12. Self-regulation of the Press in the United Kingdom Lord Hunt of Wirral13. Regulatory Responses from a Southern Archipelago Ursula Cheer14. Privacy Down Under Peter Bartlett15. Two Faces of Freedom of the Press in Indonesia's Reformation Era T Mulya Lubis
Recenzii
Overall, this is a highly impressive book... The book would appeal not just to those focusing on UK common law, but also laws from numerous other jurisdictions, especially Asia... In summary, a clear 10/10 - and essential (absolutely essential!) reading for anyone interested in Asian defamation laws.
This book is of great interest to researchers in the field of defamation laws, privacy and online challenges. The comparative elements in the text are particularly captivating.
The internet has given the world the means to more fully realize the right to seek, receive and impart information and ideas regardless of frontiers. But this giant step for freedom of information has come with equally giant challenges, including that of adapting laws and national jurisdiction to this borderless medium. Media Law and Policy in the Internet Age could not have come at a more pressing time. It provides a crucial and comparative insight into the defining issue of the decade. A must-read for anyone seeking to better comprehend the depth and breadth of the impact of the internet on our legal concepts, systems and reasoning.
It has never been easier to communicate information; the internet and social media enable anyone to be a publisher or netizen. Laws to restrict communication adapt to this new context, creating fresh battlegrounds in the continuing fight to protect freedom of expression. This book shines a bright light on the issues at stake, with insights from the front lines by individuals dedicated to media law reforms. How the law affects free speech matters to us all.
Media Law and Policy in the Internet Age represents a significant addition to the still limited literature on how we should approach media freedom globally. It coherently examines various internet-driven challenges and opportunities for media law reforms. This informatively edited volume provides an in-depth and wide-ranging insight into defamation, privacy, "open justice," the journalist's privilege, and more. The book should be essential reading for anyone interested in the international, foreign, and comparative framework for analyzing the internet's impact on media freedom and practice.
The legal environment underlying serious journalism rarely gets enough attention, yet it is crucial to what we journalists do. The shifting laws that impact our reporting have grown markedly more complex in the digital age. Fortunately, we have a groundbreaking new resource in the field. In Media Law and Policy in the Internet Age, Doreen Weisenhaus, Simon Young and their colleagues chart the global trends affecting media freedom, libel law, and online expression. For those who care about the future of free expression, this is an invaluable addition.
This book is of great interest to researchers in the field of defamation laws, privacy and online challenges. The comparative elements in the text are particularly captivating.
The internet has given the world the means to more fully realize the right to seek, receive and impart information and ideas regardless of frontiers. But this giant step for freedom of information has come with equally giant challenges, including that of adapting laws and national jurisdiction to this borderless medium. Media Law and Policy in the Internet Age could not have come at a more pressing time. It provides a crucial and comparative insight into the defining issue of the decade. A must-read for anyone seeking to better comprehend the depth and breadth of the impact of the internet on our legal concepts, systems and reasoning.
It has never been easier to communicate information; the internet and social media enable anyone to be a publisher or netizen. Laws to restrict communication adapt to this new context, creating fresh battlegrounds in the continuing fight to protect freedom of expression. This book shines a bright light on the issues at stake, with insights from the front lines by individuals dedicated to media law reforms. How the law affects free speech matters to us all.
Media Law and Policy in the Internet Age represents a significant addition to the still limited literature on how we should approach media freedom globally. It coherently examines various internet-driven challenges and opportunities for media law reforms. This informatively edited volume provides an in-depth and wide-ranging insight into defamation, privacy, "open justice," the journalist's privilege, and more. The book should be essential reading for anyone interested in the international, foreign, and comparative framework for analyzing the internet's impact on media freedom and practice.
The legal environment underlying serious journalism rarely gets enough attention, yet it is crucial to what we journalists do. The shifting laws that impact our reporting have grown markedly more complex in the digital age. Fortunately, we have a groundbreaking new resource in the field. In Media Law and Policy in the Internet Age, Doreen Weisenhaus, Simon Young and their colleagues chart the global trends affecting media freedom, libel law, and online expression. For those who care about the future of free expression, this is an invaluable addition.