In 1999, North Carolina became the thirty-first state to enact a statute granting journalists a privilege to withhold information from compelled disclosure. The North Carolina law, like other journalist\u27s privilege statutes across the United States, applies to persons, companies, or other entities engaged in the business of gathering or disseminating news. Further, by defining the privileged group in terms of news gathering and disseminating functions, the General Assembly continued the time-honored practice of state legislatures in limiting the testimonial privilege to those who work for traditional news media
Are student journalists protected by the reporter\u27\u27\u27\u27s privilege and state shield law in...
Rooted in the U.S. Constitution and state statutes known as shield laws, the reporter’s privilege ha...
Journalists in most states are permitted under state law to protect the identities of their confiden...
In 1999, North Carolina became the thirty-first state to enact a statute granting journalists a priv...
This report briefly provides an overview of general trends among the states individual statutes
Journalists have been subpoenaed and otherwise pressured to give up information and sources more tim...
In furtherance of the national interest in an informed populace, the American press has evolved into...
Despite the increasing importance of the journalist in society, one controversy which has long been ...
Journalists often take the position that confidential sources should remain anonymous. One tool jour...
Today, the statutory, common-law, and constitutional aspects of the long-dormant problem are being r...
Recent incidents of newsmen being imprisoned for refusing to disclose confidential news sources befo...
This Note will first explain, in Part I, why journalists need to be protected, and detail the histor...
In the years since Branzburg v. Hayes, 408 U.S. 665 (1972), judicial protection of journalists\u27 c...
Program year: 1996/1997Digitized from print original stored in HDRThe disenchantment of youth with t...
When the barrage of subpoenas began in early 1969, statutes of some states recognized an evidentiary...
Are student journalists protected by the reporter\u27\u27\u27\u27s privilege and state shield law in...
Rooted in the U.S. Constitution and state statutes known as shield laws, the reporter’s privilege ha...
Journalists in most states are permitted under state law to protect the identities of their confiden...
In 1999, North Carolina became the thirty-first state to enact a statute granting journalists a priv...
This report briefly provides an overview of general trends among the states individual statutes
Journalists have been subpoenaed and otherwise pressured to give up information and sources more tim...
In furtherance of the national interest in an informed populace, the American press has evolved into...
Despite the increasing importance of the journalist in society, one controversy which has long been ...
Journalists often take the position that confidential sources should remain anonymous. One tool jour...
Today, the statutory, common-law, and constitutional aspects of the long-dormant problem are being r...
Recent incidents of newsmen being imprisoned for refusing to disclose confidential news sources befo...
This Note will first explain, in Part I, why journalists need to be protected, and detail the histor...
In the years since Branzburg v. Hayes, 408 U.S. 665 (1972), judicial protection of journalists\u27 c...
Program year: 1996/1997Digitized from print original stored in HDRThe disenchantment of youth with t...
When the barrage of subpoenas began in early 1969, statutes of some states recognized an evidentiary...
Are student journalists protected by the reporter\u27\u27\u27\u27s privilege and state shield law in...
Rooted in the U.S. Constitution and state statutes known as shield laws, the reporter’s privilege ha...
Journalists in most states are permitted under state law to protect the identities of their confiden...