The Max Mosley case raised all sorts of questions about media and law but the debate about what we actually mean by “the right to privacy” went largely undiscussed. Is it time for a proper public inquiry
The principal objective of this paper is to critically examine how freedom of expression is balanced...
The right of the public to know and the right of the individual to be let alone are inherently in co...
This article conceptualises a more public, more socialised notion of privacy in contrast to the arch...
It’s an interesting time for journalism law experts. Here here’s my quick take on today’s significan...
Following on from an Index on Censorship debate on privacy, free speech and a feral press at LSE, An...
The problem of privacy today is no longer—if it ever was—a distinctly legal problem. On the contrary...
This thesis explores the issue of how to reconcile the value of individual privacy with that of free...
In both the Australian and British debates about media ethics and accountability, a key question abo...
The right to privacy of celebrities was at the core of the Leveson Inquiry. The Inquiry came about f...
The news treatment of issues at risk of invading the private sphere calls for an evaluation of ...
The Daily Mail editor Paul Dacre has argued in a speech to the Society of Editors that the judges ar...
Recent revelations of celebrity ‘super-injunctions’ have reopened the debate on privacy and celebrit...
The Article presents information related to the English rights to privacy. It further states that fo...
Must privacy and freedom of expression conflict? To witness recent debates in Britain, you might thi...
this paper argues that people are entitled to keep some true facts about themselves to themselves, s...
The principal objective of this paper is to critically examine how freedom of expression is balanced...
The right of the public to know and the right of the individual to be let alone are inherently in co...
This article conceptualises a more public, more socialised notion of privacy in contrast to the arch...
It’s an interesting time for journalism law experts. Here here’s my quick take on today’s significan...
Following on from an Index on Censorship debate on privacy, free speech and a feral press at LSE, An...
The problem of privacy today is no longer—if it ever was—a distinctly legal problem. On the contrary...
This thesis explores the issue of how to reconcile the value of individual privacy with that of free...
In both the Australian and British debates about media ethics and accountability, a key question abo...
The right to privacy of celebrities was at the core of the Leveson Inquiry. The Inquiry came about f...
The news treatment of issues at risk of invading the private sphere calls for an evaluation of ...
The Daily Mail editor Paul Dacre has argued in a speech to the Society of Editors that the judges ar...
Recent revelations of celebrity ‘super-injunctions’ have reopened the debate on privacy and celebrit...
The Article presents information related to the English rights to privacy. It further states that fo...
Must privacy and freedom of expression conflict? To witness recent debates in Britain, you might thi...
this paper argues that people are entitled to keep some true facts about themselves to themselves, s...
The principal objective of this paper is to critically examine how freedom of expression is balanced...
The right of the public to know and the right of the individual to be let alone are inherently in co...
This article conceptualises a more public, more socialised notion of privacy in contrast to the arch...