The United Kingdom’s Leveson Inquiry has been the hottest free show in town since it began taking evidence in November 2011 until the first phase of the Inquiry concluded on 24 July 2012. During that time, the general public has been exposed to a tsunami of information from the great and the good in Britain, which raised questions not only about journalism practices and ethics but the separation of powers and the rule of law. The importance to any democracy of an independent judiciary cannot be overestimated. Sir Brian Leveson began the inquiry by posing the question: Who guards the guardians? He stressed that the concept of the freedom of the press was a fundamental part of any democracy and that he had no desire to stifle freedom of speec...
The News of the World phone hacking scandal can be described as one of the biggest media scandals in...
No sooner had the Leveson Inquiry opened in 2011 than journalists and politicians were warning of a ...
The Age could find itself at the centre of a test case for a brand new law, says Martin Hirst in The...
As Britain ponders recommendations from the Leveson Inquiry into the culture, practice and ethics of...
In the wake of the News of the World hacking scandal, there was a metaphorical and self-righteous gl...
The Leveson Inquiry is carrying out the most extensive investigation into the practice and ethics of...
As a result of the phone-hacking scandal and evidence of other serious journalistic abuses by some n...
One fact that can unite all sides in the post-Leveson press regulation debate is that the world now ...
The aim of this article is to review the work of the official inquiry committee headed by Lord Justi...
Hackgate is the biggest scandal to engulf the mainstream press in decades. What started as a small b...
Channel 4 News reports on the Irish regulatory system which includes a statutory elemen
Editorial comment by Julian Harris on the publication and reception of Lord Justice Leveson's four-v...
Preparing for my MA dissertation project in 2000, I expressed to my tutor my interest in investigati...
A government consultation on press regulation which asked for views on whether to commence Section 4...
A government consultation on press regulation which asked for views on whether to commence Section 4...
The News of the World phone hacking scandal can be described as one of the biggest media scandals in...
No sooner had the Leveson Inquiry opened in 2011 than journalists and politicians were warning of a ...
The Age could find itself at the centre of a test case for a brand new law, says Martin Hirst in The...
As Britain ponders recommendations from the Leveson Inquiry into the culture, practice and ethics of...
In the wake of the News of the World hacking scandal, there was a metaphorical and self-righteous gl...
The Leveson Inquiry is carrying out the most extensive investigation into the practice and ethics of...
As a result of the phone-hacking scandal and evidence of other serious journalistic abuses by some n...
One fact that can unite all sides in the post-Leveson press regulation debate is that the world now ...
The aim of this article is to review the work of the official inquiry committee headed by Lord Justi...
Hackgate is the biggest scandal to engulf the mainstream press in decades. What started as a small b...
Channel 4 News reports on the Irish regulatory system which includes a statutory elemen
Editorial comment by Julian Harris on the publication and reception of Lord Justice Leveson's four-v...
Preparing for my MA dissertation project in 2000, I expressed to my tutor my interest in investigati...
A government consultation on press regulation which asked for views on whether to commence Section 4...
A government consultation on press regulation which asked for views on whether to commence Section 4...
The News of the World phone hacking scandal can be described as one of the biggest media scandals in...
No sooner had the Leveson Inquiry opened in 2011 than journalists and politicians were warning of a ...
The Age could find itself at the centre of a test case for a brand new law, says Martin Hirst in The...