Lawsuits brought by corporations against news organizations during the last few years demonstrate that it is no longer sufficient for the press to get its facts straight. With some industries literally fighting for their lives, a new legal climate has encourage litigation that deflects bad publicity by shifting the focus away from the traditional issue of accuracy to a critical examination of the news media\u27s newsgathering techniques. Concerns about the reaction of courts to unorthodox reporting methods may prompt news organizations to censor themselves, but the author argues that facing the threat of mega-verdicts or contempt citations should be regarded as simply a cost of doing busines
Emphasis has been put on situations which appear to indicate that the press has been, at the very le...
In November 1995, the prominent CBS newsmagazine 60 Minutes refrained from broadcasting an important...
SUING THE PRESS: LIBEL, THE MEDIA, AND POWER. By Rodney Smolla. New York: Oxford University Press. ...
This Article analyzes two recent high-profile cases involving investigative journalism by ABC News. ...
“A Generation of Vipers,” proclaimed the cover story in The Columbia Journalism Review, as the natio...
The issue of news organizations\u27 potential liability for their newsgathering practices has garner...
Since its beginning, the actual malice test first announced in 1964 in New York Times v. Sullivan, h...
This Article identifies a new front in the current war against the media one in which billionaire pr...
Part I of this Article will discuss defamation law with a focus on the Court’s decision in New York ...
Virtually every year since New York Times v Sullivan, the Supreme Court has decided at least one or ...
Cases to be cited below in this article will show that libel\u27s line of danger in many instances i...
Media lawyers have recently been confronted with a relatively new source of litigation: the tort of ...
The Uniform Law Commissioners are preparing to begin debate on the most sweeping changes to libel la...
In Cohen v. Cowles Media Co., Justice Byron R. White wrote that the First Amendment offers no protec...
Several factors explain why press reporting of legal affairs results in defamation suits. Legal matt...
Emphasis has been put on situations which appear to indicate that the press has been, at the very le...
In November 1995, the prominent CBS newsmagazine 60 Minutes refrained from broadcasting an important...
SUING THE PRESS: LIBEL, THE MEDIA, AND POWER. By Rodney Smolla. New York: Oxford University Press. ...
This Article analyzes two recent high-profile cases involving investigative journalism by ABC News. ...
“A Generation of Vipers,” proclaimed the cover story in The Columbia Journalism Review, as the natio...
The issue of news organizations\u27 potential liability for their newsgathering practices has garner...
Since its beginning, the actual malice test first announced in 1964 in New York Times v. Sullivan, h...
This Article identifies a new front in the current war against the media one in which billionaire pr...
Part I of this Article will discuss defamation law with a focus on the Court’s decision in New York ...
Virtually every year since New York Times v Sullivan, the Supreme Court has decided at least one or ...
Cases to be cited below in this article will show that libel\u27s line of danger in many instances i...
Media lawyers have recently been confronted with a relatively new source of litigation: the tort of ...
The Uniform Law Commissioners are preparing to begin debate on the most sweeping changes to libel la...
In Cohen v. Cowles Media Co., Justice Byron R. White wrote that the First Amendment offers no protec...
Several factors explain why press reporting of legal affairs results in defamation suits. Legal matt...
Emphasis has been put on situations which appear to indicate that the press has been, at the very le...
In November 1995, the prominent CBS newsmagazine 60 Minutes refrained from broadcasting an important...
SUING THE PRESS: LIBEL, THE MEDIA, AND POWER. By Rodney Smolla. New York: Oxford University Press. ...