In English law, there are calls by a section of the public that Parliament should enact privacy law, to offer protection for the right to privacy which is guaranteed under the Human Rights Act 1998. However, the current tort system provides various ways of protecting privacy. This article will demonstrate how private nuisance, trespass to land, battery, the Protection from Harassment Act 1997, defamation, misuse of private information and other means can be used to protect such rights. The call for a Bills of Rights and the ongoing Leveson Inquiry may have an impact on privacy in English law. This article will show that ‘the let us study as we go’ approach adopted by the court will be more appropriate, rather than legislation by parliamen...
This paper justifies and delineates a common law right to privacy. The first part of the paper revi...
Following on from an Index on Censorship debate on privacy, free speech and a feral press at LSE, An...
The right of privacy is an aggregate of many separate rights, each of which is guaranteed in the Bil...
To demonstrate that any common law system can adequately and legitimately protect informational priv...
The article discusses the impact of Article 8 of the European Court of Human Rights which recognises...
Human Rights took a significant shape following the Universal Declaration in 1948. Since then system...
In recent years, a series of leading cases have returned to consider these questions. The implicatio...
At this time there is little doubt that the right of privacy is well established in most American ju...
The average Englishman\u27s habits of reserve and regard for his own privacy are legendary. It is su...
The principal objective of this paper is to critically examine how freedom of expression is balanced...
A More Principled Approach to the Conflict between Privacy and Freedom of Expression in the Law of M...
This Article argues that the current interpretation given to the four-part invasion of privacy frame...
This article concerns two interrelated, persistent problems for privacy law. The first is the failur...
Privacy and freedom of speech are important human rights, but until recently they have not been stro...
The New Zealand Court of Appeal has recently acknowledged the existence of a freestanding tort of in...
This paper justifies and delineates a common law right to privacy. The first part of the paper revi...
Following on from an Index on Censorship debate on privacy, free speech and a feral press at LSE, An...
The right of privacy is an aggregate of many separate rights, each of which is guaranteed in the Bil...
To demonstrate that any common law system can adequately and legitimately protect informational priv...
The article discusses the impact of Article 8 of the European Court of Human Rights which recognises...
Human Rights took a significant shape following the Universal Declaration in 1948. Since then system...
In recent years, a series of leading cases have returned to consider these questions. The implicatio...
At this time there is little doubt that the right of privacy is well established in most American ju...
The average Englishman\u27s habits of reserve and regard for his own privacy are legendary. It is su...
The principal objective of this paper is to critically examine how freedom of expression is balanced...
A More Principled Approach to the Conflict between Privacy and Freedom of Expression in the Law of M...
This Article argues that the current interpretation given to the four-part invasion of privacy frame...
This article concerns two interrelated, persistent problems for privacy law. The first is the failur...
Privacy and freedom of speech are important human rights, but until recently they have not been stro...
The New Zealand Court of Appeal has recently acknowledged the existence of a freestanding tort of in...
This paper justifies and delineates a common law right to privacy. The first part of the paper revi...
Following on from an Index on Censorship debate on privacy, free speech and a feral press at LSE, An...
The right of privacy is an aggregate of many separate rights, each of which is guaranteed in the Bil...