670 results on '"media law"'
Search Results
2. Legal Requirements for Addressing the Anti-Cultural Effects of Television Advertising in the Iranian Legal System
- Author
-
Seyyed Ahmad Habibnezhad and Mohammadreza Moradian Nayyeri
- Subjects
television advertising ,commercial advertisements ,media law ,advertising laws ,culture ,social justice ,Islamic law ,KBP1-4860 - Abstract
∴ Introduction ∴ The rapid expansion of commercial advertising, especially through television, has created significant societal and cultural impacts. The unique attributes of television—its vast reach, diverse audience, and combination of visual and auditory stimuli—make it an exceptionally potent medium. This influence, however, is a double-edged sword, capable of both positive and negative effects. Television advertising, driven by modern nihilism and neoliberal ideologies, often oversteps reasonable boundaries, potentially causing cultural harm. The definition of culture, as articulated by Taylor, includes an array of elements such as language, religion, art, law, and morality, all of which can be affected by television commercials. Television advertisements interact intimately with public culture and societal norms, leading to significant legal challenges. Consequently, nations worldwide have instituted laws to regulate television advertising, curbing misleading advertisements and other violations even within free-market economies. In Iran, where cultural values are deeply rooted and the rule of law is paramount, it is crucial to scrutinize the legal boundaries of television advertising to mitigate its potentially anti-cultural impacts. This research investigates the legal frameworks that address the cultural impacts of television advertising in Iran. It aims to delineate the existing regulations and assess the effectiveness of these legal norms in safeguarding Iranian cultural values against the detrimental effects of commercial advertising. ∴ Research Question ∴ The main question of this study is: "What are the legal requirements for addressing the anti-cultural effects of television advertising in the Iranian legal system?" This question arises from the need to understand how existing laws in Iran regulate television advertising to protect cultural values and societal norms. It seeks to explore the adequacy of these regulations in countering the cultural degradation caused by commercial advertising. ∴ Research Hypothesis ∴ The central hypothesis of this study posits that despite the existence of numerous legal norms aimed at curbing the anti-cultural effects of television advertising, these objectives have not been fully realized. The hypothesis suggests that the current legal norms are fragmented and inadequately enforced, failing to effectively mitigate the cultural harms posed by television commercials. Unlike prior research, which has predominantly focused on the ethical and jurisprudential aspects of television advertising, this study emphasizes the legal norms governing the cultural impacts of television advertising. It hypothesizes that a more consolidated and refined legal framework is necessary for effectively regulating the cultural consequences of television advertising in Iran. ∴ Methodology & Framework, if Applicable ∴ This study adopts a qualitative and practical approach, primarily utilizing library-based research methods. The methodology involves a comprehensive analysis of existing legal documents, regulations, and policies that govern television advertising in Iran. The research framework is structured as follows: Literature Review: The literature review encompasses a thorough examination of previous studies on the cultural impacts of television advertising. This includes both Iranian and international perspectives, providing a comparative analysis of different regulatory approaches. The review highlights gaps in the existing literature, particularly the lack of focus on the legal aspects of cultural regulation in television advertising. Legal Analysis: The legal analysis involves scrutinizing the Iranian legal framework, including the constitution, statutory laws, and regulations related to television advertising. This analysis aims to identify the specific legal provisions that address the cultural impacts of television advertising and evaluate their effectiveness. Case Studies: Case studies of specific television advertisements in Iran are examined to illustrate the practical application of the legal norms. These case studies help to understand how current regulations are enforced and identify any discrepancies or shortcomings in their implementation. Interviews with Legal Experts: Interviews with legal experts, policymakers, and practitioners in the field of media law are conducted to gain insights into the practical challenges and potential solutions for regulating the cultural impacts of television advertising. These interviews provide valuable perspectives on the effectiveness of existing legal norms and suggest areas for improvement. Comparative Analysis: A comparative analysis is conducted to examine how other countries regulate the cultural impacts of television advertising. This analysis provides insights into best practices and potential strategies that could be adopted in the Iranian context. Synthesis and Recommendations: The final stage of the methodology involves synthesizing the findings from the literature review, legal analysis, case studies, interviews, and comparative analysis. Based on this synthesis, recommendations are made for refining and consolidating the legal framework governing television advertising in Iran. These recommendations aim to enhance the effectiveness of legal norms in protecting cultural values against the negative impacts of commercial advertising. ∴ Results & Discussion ∴ The study has meticulously analyzed the Iranian legal framework concerning television advertising and its cultural impacts. The research reveals that despite the establishment of extensive legal norms aimed at preventing the anti-cultural effects of television commercials, these norms have not fully achieved their intended objectives. The study identifies several critical findings: Comprehensive Legal Norms: Over the past four decades, Iran has developed a comprehensive set of legal norms at three levels—constitutional, ordinary laws, and specific regulations of the IRIB. These norms cover a wide array of areas, including economic distribution and consumption, women and family, children, ethics, social customs, audience and consumer rights, religious and jurisprudential rules, Persian language and literature, domestic and foreign policy, national independence, patriotic values, and social justice. Persistent Anti-Cultural Effects: Despite these extensive regulations, television commercials in Iran continue to exhibit anti-cultural and destructive elements. Issues such as consumerism, unrealistic lifestyles, feelings of inferiority, extravagance, fashion obsession, instrumental use of women and children, and reinforcement of social inequalities remain prevalent in commercial advertisements. Legislative Ambiguity and Enforcement Gaps: The study finds that the primary root of these problems is not the absence of legal norms but rather the ambiguity and lack of thoroughness in existing laws. This results in ineffective enforcement and compliance. The lack of clear oversight and enforcement mechanisms further exacerbates the situation, leading to widespread violations of legal norms in television advertising. Institutional Conflicts and Inefficiencies: The consolidation of legislative, executive, oversight, criminalization, and judicial roles within the General Directorate of Commerce of IRIB has led to significant issues. These include conflicts of interest, lack of independence, inefficiency, and lack of accountability. Such institutional arrangements hinder the proper enforcement of legal norms and prevent the establishment of effective oversight and judicial procedures. The discussion focuses on the implications of these findings and explores potential solutions to address the identified issues. Key points include: Need for Legislative Clarity and Precision: The study underscores the need for clearer and more precise legislative norms to effectively regulate television advertising. Laws should be specific, unambiguous, and comprehensive, covering all aspects of commercial advertising that could potentially harm cultural values. Enhanced Oversight and Enforcement Mechanisms: Effective enforcement of legal norms requires robust oversight mechanisms. Independent regulatory bodies, free from conflicts of interest, should be established to monitor and enforce compliance with advertising regulations. These bodies should have the authority to impose penalties and take corrective actions against violators. Institutional Reforms: The study advocates for institutional reforms to address the conflicts of interest and inefficiencies within the IRIB. Separating the legislative, executive, and judicial roles related to television advertising can help ensure greater transparency, accountability, and effectiveness in regulatory processes. Public Awareness and Education: Raising public awareness about the cultural impacts of television advertising is crucial. Educational campaigns can help audiences recognize and critically evaluate the content of advertisements, reducing their susceptibility to harmful influences. International Best Practices: The study suggests looking at international best practices in regulating television advertising. Comparative analysis with other countries can provide valuable insights and strategies that could be adapted to the Iranian context, enhancing the effectiveness of local regulations. Holistic Cultural Policies: Addressing the anti-cultural effects of television advertising requires a holistic approach. Cultural policies should integrate various aspects of society, including media regulation, education, and public policy, to create a cohesive framework that supports cultural preservation and promotes positive values. ∴ Conclusion ∴ The findings of this study highlight the Iranian legal system's attention to regulating the cultural impacts of television advertising. However, the persistence of anti-cultural elements in commercials indicates significant gaps in the enforcement and effectiveness of these regulations. The study concludes that: The existing legal norms, while comprehensive, lack the clarity and thoroughness needed for effective enforcement. Institutional arrangements within the IRIB contribute to conflicts of interest, inefficiency, and lack of accountability, hindering proper regulation of television advertising. Effective solutions require legislative reforms to clarify and strengthen legal norms, the establishment of independent oversight bodies, and institutional reforms to ensure transparency and accountability. Public awareness and education, coupled with international best practices, can enhance the regulatory framework and mitigate the cultural harms of television advertising. This research underscores the need for a multi-faceted approach to address the anti-cultural effects of television advertising in Iran, combining legislative, institutional, and public policy reforms to protect cultural values and public order.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Journalism and Advertising: On the Separation of Editorial Content and Commercial Communication
- Author
-
Weinacht, Stefan, Krone, Jan, editor, and Pellegrini, Tassilo, editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Media Self-Regulation
- Author
-
Eberwein, Tobias, Krone, Jan, editor, and Pellegrini, Tassilo, editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. 'No One Is Going to Silence Me': A Comparison of the Conditions for Press Freedom and Independent Journalism As a Prerequisite for Democracy in the United States, Sweden, and Egypt
- Author
-
Rantakrans, Elin, Barkho, Leon, editor, Lugo-Ocando, Jairo Alfonso, editor, and Jamil, Sadia, editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. A tale of two Southeast Asian states: media governance and authoritarian regimes in Singapore and Vietnam
- Author
-
Martin Albrecht Haenig and Xianbai Ji
- Subjects
Authoritarianism ,Media governance ,Hybrid regimes ,Media law ,Singapore ,Vietnam ,Political institutions and public administration - Asia (Asian studies only) ,JQ1-6651 ,Economic growth, development, planning ,HD72-88 - Abstract
Abstract Political scientists have crafted intricate taxonomies to classify nations beyond liberal democracy, positioning these societies along an authoritarian continuum. Despite the pivotal role of journalists in accelerating political dynamics, there exists a lack of comparative research on media governance in these regimes. Consequently, this study scrutinizes the media governance ecosystems in Vietnam and Singapore. Vietnam is a one-party authoritarian state, whereas Singapore represents a hybrid political system. However, both countries exhibit a stable and uninterrupted rule by the respective ruling party. Our research uncovers the nuances of Singapore’s media regulation, which embeds trusted stakeholders with financial interests in key press roles to reinforce the implicit political norms. Conversely, Vietnam employs a more direct, coercive, and state-centric approach. Media actors in both nations occasionally test the boundaries of acceptable discourses, with each government’s responses being shaped by specific contexts and broader history. Reforms in Vietnam, embracing privatization and commercialization, mirror Singapore’s integration of capitalism, public ownership, and commercial interests when governing media. These findings highlight diverse yet effective authoritarian media governance strategies, unique features, and commonalities in both systems. Overall, media structures in these Southeast Asian countries have undergone profound evolutions towards more sophisticated regulatory tools to manage societal and political transformations.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. A tale of two Southeast Asian states: media governance and authoritarian regimes in Singapore and Vietnam.
- Author
-
Haenig, Martin Albrecht and Ji, Xianbai
- Subjects
AUTHORITARIANISM ,POLITICAL scientists ,DEMOCRACY ,POLITICAL systems - Abstract
Political scientists have crafted intricate taxonomies to classify nations beyond liberal democracy, positioning these societies along an authoritarian continuum. Despite the pivotal role of journalists in accelerating political dynamics, there exists a lack of comparative research on media governance in these regimes. Consequently, this study scrutinizes the media governance ecosystems in Vietnam and Singapore. Vietnam is a one-party authoritarian state, whereas Singapore represents a hybrid political system. However, both countries exhibit a stable and uninterrupted rule by the respective ruling party. Our research uncovers the nuances of Singapore's media regulation, which embeds trusted stakeholders with financial interests in key press roles to reinforce the implicit political norms. Conversely, Vietnam employs a more direct, coercive, and state-centric approach. Media actors in both nations occasionally test the boundaries of acceptable discourses, with each government's responses being shaped by specific contexts and broader history. Reforms in Vietnam, embracing privatization and commercialization, mirror Singapore's integration of capitalism, public ownership, and commercial interests when governing media. These findings highlight diverse yet effective authoritarian media governance strategies, unique features, and commonalities in both systems. Overall, media structures in these Southeast Asian countries have undergone profound evolutions towards more sophisticated regulatory tools to manage societal and political transformations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. European Media Systems for Deliberative Communication
- Author
-
Peruško, Zrinjka
- Subjects
Media systems ,National media ,Deliberative communication ,Journalism ,Mass communication ,Media policy ,Media policies ,Media law ,Comparative media studies ,Audience ,Media use ,Media engagement ,Free speech ,Freedom of speech ,Social change ,Media accountability ,Media ethics ,thema EDItEUR::A The Arts::AB The arts: general topics ,thema EDItEUR::J Society and Social Sciences::JB Society and culture: general::JBC Cultural and media studies::JBCT Media studies ,thema EDItEUR::G Reference, Information and Interdisciplinary subjects::GT Interdisciplinary studies::GTM Regional / International studies ,thema EDItEUR::R Earth Sciences, Geography, Environment, Planning::RG Geography::RGL Regional geography ,thema EDItEUR::G Reference, Information and Interdisciplinary subjects::GT Interdisciplinary studies::GTC Communication studies ,thema EDItEUR::K Economics, Finance, Business and Management::KC Economics ,thema EDItEUR::N History and Archaeology::NH History ,thema EDItEUR::K Economics, Finance, Business and Management::KN Industry and industrial studies::KNT Media, entertainment, information and communication industries::KNTP Publishing industry and journalism::KNTP2 News media and journalism - Abstract
European Media Systems for Deliberative Communication explores how four dimensions of national media systems – the legal framework for freedom of expression and information, media accountability, journalism and audience media usage and competencies – contribute to or are detrimental to the success of deliberative communication. Drawing on a study of 14 European countries and their media systems, the volume provides comparative and individual perspectives to examine the social consequences of various types of media systems. By using fsQCA (fuzzy set qualitative comparative analysis), the authors relate deliberative communication to the legal framework for freedom of expression and freedom of information, media accountability, journalism and media usage and media competencies. The book shows how different combinations of conditions and contexts figure as risks or opportunities that are detrimental to, or supportive of, deliberative communication, measured with an original index on a European level. This book will interest scholars and students in communication studies, political communication, media and society, media sociology, global media studies, European Studies and journalism.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Media in War: An Overview of the European Restrictions on Russian Media
- Author
-
Gergely Ferenc Lendvai
- Subjects
european union ,media law ,media regulation ,russian propaganda ,russo-ukrainian war ,rt ,Law ,Law of Europe ,KJ-KKZ - Abstract
(Series Information) European Papers - A Journal on Law and Integration, 2023 8(3), 1235-1245 | European Forum Insight of 24 January 2024 | (Table of Contents) I. Introduction: Russian propaganda in state and online media: disinformation machinery in full swing. - I.1. Conceptual premise: a brief comparison between propaganda and disinformation. - I.2. Disinformation machinery in full swing: Russian propaganda in state and online media. - II. The RT case. - II.1. Disinformation machinery in full swing – Russian propaganda in state and online media. - II.2. RT France’s appeal. - III. “For the first time in modern history, Western European governments are banning media”: polemics with the banning of RT and Sputnik. - IV. Quo vadis propaganda regulation?. | (Abstract) The ongoing Russia-Ukraine conflict has triggered a multitude of media regulation challenges within the EU. With the Russian state propaganda machinery continuing to work in full swing, it has become increasingly critical for the EU to regulate media content to prevent the dissemination of disinformation, harmful and misleading information and state propaganda. This Insight seeks to explore the EU’s reaction to the Russian coverage of the war through the example of the RT case. The study aims to provide a theoretical background to Russian propaganda as a premise for the case study. The focus of the Insight is the examination of the RT suspension and the RT France case via the broader understanding of “propaganda” restrictions using the case law of the CJEU and the ECtHR. The study also aims to introduce a scholarly critical viewpoint with regard to imposing stringent restrictive measures against a media outlet and the effectivity thereof. The main argument of the Insight is that the nuanced and contextual understanding of media in war is not only a legal necessity but an effective societal tool, too, especially in the Russo-Ukrainian war.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. REKLAM HUKUKU AÇISINDAN SOSYAL MEDYA KULLANICI DAVRANIŞLARININ REKLAM KABUL EDİLEBİLİRLİĞİNİN DEĞERLENDİRİLMESİ
- Author
-
Abdurrahman Hamza Tüzgen
- Subjects
advertisement law ,social media ,social media advertisements ,social media influencer ,media law ,reklam hukuku ,sosyal medya ,sosyal medya reklamları ,sosyal medya etkileyicisi ,medya hukuku ,Law - Abstract
Sosyal medya platformlarının gündelik hayattaki yerinin her geçen gün artmasına bağlı olarak reklam anlayışı da ciddi bir dönüşüm yaşamaya başlamıştır. Bu değişim, sosyal medya kullanımının arttıkça, yeni reklam yöntemlerini bünyesine katarak, yenilenmeye devam etmektedir. Reklam alanındaki hukuki düzenlemeler her zaman bu değişime aynı hızda ayak uyduramadığı için kimi zaman ortaya birtakım sorunlar çıkmaktadır. Sorunların çözümleri için öncelikle sosyal medyanın kendine has yapısının ve bu yapının ortaya çıkardığı reklamların tespiti büyük önem arz etmektedir. Çalışmamızda, tespiti yapılması ve çözüm üretilmesi gereken birçok konu arasından, sosyal medya kullanıcı davranışlarının reklam kabul edilebilip edilemeyeceğinin tespiti üzerinde durulmuştur. Makalede, yaygın sosyal medya davranışları ayrıntılı olarak ele alınmıştır. Bu davranışların organik ve reklam amaçlı kullanımının farkının belirlenmesi zorluk arz etmektedir. Bu sebeple, her davranış biçimi için örnekler ve kararlar üzerinden reklam kabul edilebilme durumları açıklığa kavuşturulmaya çalışılmıştır. Çalışmanın sonuçları, sosyal medya platformlarındaki reklam kullanımının karmaşıklığını göstermekte ve hukuki süreçler için önemli ipuçları sunmaktadır. Sosyal medya platformlarında reklam türlerinin sürekli değişkenlik gösterdiği göz önünde bulundurulduğunda, bu çalışmanın gelecekteki araştırmalara ve düzenlemelere katkı sağlaması hedeflenmektedir.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Religious and Ecclesiastical Media in the Hungarian Electronic Media Ecosystem
- Author
-
András Radetzky
- Subjects
content ,ecclesiastical media ,hungary ,media law ,media economy ,religious ,Philosophy. Psychology. Religion - Abstract
Many academic works examine religious media institutions and media content producers operating in European countries, including Hungary, but most of them do so in an isolated way, mostly focusing on a particular content producer. The present study aims to provide a comprehensive picture of the operation of religious content producers in Hungary in a broader context, which considers the overall media system from a legal and economic point of view. First, we give a short retrospective overview about the history of Hungarian church press. Afterwards we examine the current legal framework for audiovisual regulation in Hungary. The conclusions are based on data obtained using three different methodologies. We have analyzed the freely accessible records of the Hungarian media authority (NMHH) and legislation, conducted a total of 6 in-depth interviews and an analysis of the content produced by each media outlet. The results of our research showed that in Hungary there is a disconnect between the concepts of church and religious media and that churches have hardly any comprehensive strategy to exploit the potential of digitalization. It can be concluded that church-owned media with religious content cannot be included in the present legal and economic framework without problems. Finally, an important question is whether and how church media are adapting to the changed environment. Our case studies show that the picture is mixed in this respect, because there is a lack of a coherent strategy among the actors on how service providers can adapt as effectively as possible to the new technological consumption patterns.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Russian Bans on 'Fake News' about the war in Ukraine: Conditional truth and unconditional loyalty.
- Author
-
Sherstoboeva, Elena
- Subjects
- *
FAKE news , *LOYALTY , *FREEDOM of expression , *WAR , *LEGAL judgments , *IDEOLOGY - Abstract
This article examines Russia's practice of the ban introduced by the so-called 'fake news laws' during the war against Ukraine. It blends doctrinal legal with discourse analysis to study how and why Russian courts have applied the laws, which epistemology of knowledge they have constructed while limiting fake news about the war and what implications this has for freedom of expression and public debate of the war within Russia. The dataset covers 446 Russian court decisions from 2022 to 2023. A historical approach is utilised to discuss the results in connection to the Soviet Communist ideology. The article argues that Russian courts have used the laws to make truth in Russia conditional and loyalty unconditional, actualising the Soviet principles of 'partyness', 'objectivity' and 'scientificalness'. It demonstrates how courts construct a mythologised reality about the 'imaginary' 'military operation' to help the government monopolise the public debate and misrepresent the war against Ukraine within Russia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. KRAJOWA RADA RADIOFONII I TELEWIZJI WOBEC ZAGROŻEŃ PLURALIZMU MEDIÓW.
- Author
-
JASKUŁA, LIDIA K.
- Abstract
Copyright of Zeszyty Prawnicze Biuro Analiz Sejmowej is the property of Kancelaria Sejmu and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. The News Media Bargaining Code: Impacts on Australian journalism one year on.
- Author
-
Bossio, Diana and Barnet, Belinda
- Subjects
NEGOTIATION ,CITIZEN journalism ,JOURNALISM ,PUBLIC interest ,DIGITAL technology - Abstract
Copyright of Policy & Internet is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. REKLAM HUKUKU AÇISINDAN SOSYAL MEDYA KULLANICI DAVRANIŞLARININ REKLAM KABUL EDİLEBİLİRLİĞİNİN DEĞERLENDİRİLMESİ.
- Author
-
TÜZGEN, Abdurrahman Hamza
- Abstract
Copyright of ASBU Law Journal is the property of Social Sciences University of Ankara and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. The advent of community-based private media in Ethiopia: Implications for nation building and integration
- Author
-
Wubante Ayalew Dessie, Tewodros Woldearegay, and Azizachew Wonde
- Subjects
community-based private media ,ethnicity ,media law ,nation building and integration ,Social Sciences - Abstract
AbstractThe aim of the study was assessing the implications of community-based private media for nation building in Ethiopia. To this end, the study employed a mixed research approach. Likewise, interviews, questionnaires, and document reviews were employed as data gathering tools of the study. The study population consisted of community-based private television stations found in Ethiopia such as Oromia Media Network, Amhara Satellite Radio and Television, Oromia Broadcasting Service, LTV Ethiopia, Ethiopian broadcast authorities, Ethiopian journalist associations, and political elites. As well, purposive and convenient sampling was utilized for selecting interviewees, and simple random sampling was employed for selecting participants for questionnaires. In so doing, 400 informants were selected as the sample size of the study. Thematic data analysis was used for the qualitative data, and SPSS with descriptive and inferential statistics were used for the quantitative data. Thus, the findings of this study revealed as follows: First, community-based private media has a devastating role in nation-building and state integration in Ethiopia. Similarly, community-based media played a significant role in inciting conflict and violence in the country, and they have made a momentous contribution to destabilizing the on-going political transition. Second, the on-going violence in the country is fuelled by community-based media in a state-sponsored manner, primarily by people who are in the government structure deliberately working against the interests of the government to fasten the disintegration among various ethnic communities in the country. Third, community-based media often propagate ethnic nationalism to erode the national unity and solidarity of the people by reporting fake news. Therefore, the study concluded that the key constraints causing Ethiopia’s nation-building process and state integration to weaken over the last few years are the absence of media law to shape the media’s behaviour pattern, weak leadership, the absence of credible independent civic associations, a lack of political determination to maintain law and order in the country, and the presence of poor media ethics. Media law shall be effectively applied to make community-based media’s contribution to nation building and state integration positive as well as to make them accountable for their deeds.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. 'Absolutely Delighted': Media Coverage of the Arrest of Peter Sutcliffe and the Impact on the Contempt of Court Act 1981.
- Author
-
Jones, Richard
- Subjects
- *
CONTEMPT of court , *ARREST , *SERIAL murderers , *PRESS conferences , *LAW reports, digests, etc. , *SERIAL murders , *SHAME - Abstract
Reporting on crime and the courts are among the classic functions of journalism. In the UK, journalists and others must abide by the Contempt of Court Act 1981, the main piece of primary legislation aimed at ensuring coverage of legal matters is fair to the participants. The restrictions are generally tighter in practice than in jurisdictions such as the US, where the media has a much freer hand to engage in pre-trial reporting. This paper argues that media coverage of the arrest of the so-called 'Yorkshire Ripper' serial killer, Peter Sutcliffe, in 1981 while Parliament was considering the question of contempt, has made the UK regime tougher than it might otherwise have been. Excessive reporting was influenced by an unusually celebratory police news conference. This news coverage coloured the contemporary debate around contempt, and any opportunity for a more relaxed approach to contempt in the UK's jurisdictions was lost. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. NEW LEGAL REGULATION OF PUBLICATIONS IN SLOVAK MEDIA ENVIRONMENT.
- Author
-
VIŠŇOVSKÝ, Ján, SOLÍK, Martin, and DÚBRAVSKÁ, Oľga
- Subjects
MASS media laws ,WEB portals ,PUBLICATIONS ,SELF regulation - Abstract
The study deals with the legal regulation of publications in the Slovak Republic, noting the position of publishers and web portal operators in the context of the new law 'on publications'. This law specified publishers and operators as participants in the media market, defined community media, and established modern regulatory elements, including self-regulation, which have brought significant transparency to the ownership and financing of print and web media. In this study, we note the historical outline of the development of the press after 1989, the stabilisation of the situation within the legislative regulation of the press in 2008, while our primary objective is to define the current legal standards of the newly adopted Publications Act. We also reflect on the possible risks and problems that the new law entails, but our main aim is to present the fundamental and innovative changes that have resulted from several years of legislative process in the field of media law. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Historical evolution of legislative regulation of the media in the west.
- Author
-
Ernestovna, Lebedeva Simona, Vladislavovich, Vakku Grigory, Boleslavovna, Solovey Larisa, and Konstantinovich, Goncharov Dmitry
- Abstract
The objective of this study is to analyze the legal regulation of the media in Western countries. The study is based on universal scientific methods, such as observation, deduction, analysis, comparative and historical historical analysis of different legislatures and the practices of their implementation. The countries chosen for the analysis are the so-called "old Europe" countries. The study concludes that the legal regulation of the media is a complex issue that must be addressed with a holistic approach. The law is important, but it is not enough to guarantee freedom of expression and information pluralism. There is also a need for effective law enforcement and media monitoring systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. EXPLORING THE INTERPLAY BETWEEN ADVERTISEMENTS, MEDIA LAW, AND SOCIETY IN INDIA.
- Author
-
Sayyed, Hifajatali, Kasture, Jayendra, and Prasad, K. D. V.
- Abstract
Copyright of Lex Humana is the property of Lex Humana and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
21. Seeking the Legitimation of Mainstream Journalism: A Portuguese Case-Study.
- Author
-
Alvares, Claudia, Cardoso, Gustavo, Crespo, Miguel, and Pinto-Martinho, Ana
- Subjects
ALTERNATIVE mass media ,FREEDOM of expression ,JOURNALISM ,DIGITAL technology ,CIVIL rights ,ONLINE journalism ,OBJECTIVITY in journalism ,JOURNALISTIC ethics - Abstract
This article consists in a case-study of the Portuguese site Notícias Viriato (NV), which has controversially been registered by the Portuguese Regulatory Authority (ERC) as a 'general information' site, officially recognised as drawing close to mainstream journalism in a context of accusations of rightwing bias. We will argue that NV's registration with ERC marks a new phase for the far right in the Portuguese political and journalistic spheres, due to grounding legitimation in the Constitutional right to freedom of expression. By drawing close to officialdom, this news site bypasses the inexistence, in the Portuguese juridical framework, of advocacy journalism. According to the Portuguese Constitution, partisanship excludes journalistic activity, with journalism being of an 'informative', and therefore objective, nature. While the dangers of partisanship are recognised, the existence of an advocacy continuum within journalism are ignored. In a digital era in which journalistic objectivity has ceased to be the norm, the labelling of journalism as 'general information', defined against 'partisanship', is incapable of responding to the challenges posed by alternative media in redefining professional journalism. This demonstrates the need to update both the Portuguese Constitution and prevalent media legislation to accompany changing times. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Failure of political governance in Fiji: Dysfunctional policy and the media.
- Author
-
RAMESH, SANJAY
- Subjects
FREEDOM of the press ,MASS media censorship ,GOVERNMENT & the press ,DEMOCRACY ,MEDIA rights - Abstract
Failure of political governance is commonplace in Fiji where lack of media freedom, democratic bargaining, political transparency, and accountability has led to political dysfunction and political strife, including military coups, suppression of rights of journalists and media organisations, suspension of freedom of expression, lack of democratic accountability, including draconian media rules and laws that encourage media self-censorship and political oversight over media content. Democratic deficit theory highlights that so-called democratic governments such as Fiji fall short of fulfilling the principles of democracy in their practices and operation because of its history of suppressing media rights, including fundamental freedoms of citizens to express themselves freely. Under such circumstances, Fiji citizens have taken to social media, especially after the 2006 military coup as the future of media freedom remains uncertain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Media, the courts, and terrorism: Lessons from the Christchurch mosque attacks.
- Author
-
ELLIS, GAVIN
- Subjects
CONDUCT of court proceedings ,MASS media ,TERRORISM ,MOSQUES - Abstract
Court proceedings against the alleged perpretrator of the Christchurch mosque attacks in 2019 led to what may be ground-breaking cooperation between the judicial system and the media to balance fair trial rights and a determination to (a) avoid retraumatisation and (b) prevent the court being used as a platform for white supremacist propaganda. The case, and the willingness of media to honour these imperatives, demonstrates the centrality of publicity in acts of terrorism known as 'propaganda of the deed'. The research outlined in this article suggests that institutional cooperation can avoid 'giving oxygen' to perpetrators and their causes without sacrificing journalistic integrity or a duty to bear witness in the interests of open justice. A change of plea resulted in proceedings being limited to a sentencing hearing. A lengthy trial may have tested the robustness of the measures put in place but, nonetheless, the planning processes employed in New Zealand lead to a conclusion that they could provide a basis for similar cooperation in other judicial jurisdictions, such as Australia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. The advent of community-based private media in Ethiopia: Implications for nation building and integration.
- Author
-
Ayalew Dessie, Wubante, Woldearegay, Tewodros, and Wonde, Azizachew
- Abstract
The aim of the study was assessing the implications of community-based private media for nation building in Ethiopia. To this end, the study employed a mixed research approach. Likewise, interviews, questionnaires, and document reviews were employed as data gathering tools of the study. The study population consisted of community-based private television stations found in Ethiopia such as Oromia Media Network, Amhara Satellite Radio and Television, Oromia Broadcasting Service, LTV Ethiopia, Ethiopian broadcast authorities, Ethiopian journalist associations, and political elites. As well, purposive and convenient sampling was utilized for selecting interviewees, and simple random sampling was employed for selecting participants for questionnaires. In so doing, 400 informants were selected as the sample size of the study. Thematic data analysis was used for the qualitative data, and SPSS with descriptive and inferential statistics were used for the quantitative data. Thus, the findings of this study revealed as follows: First, community-based private media has a devastating role in nation-building and state integration in Ethiopia. Similarly, community-based media played a significant role in inciting conflict and violence in the country, and they have made a momentous contribution to destabilizing the on-going political transition. Second, the on-going violence in the country is fuelled by community-based media in a state-sponsored manner, primarily by people who are in the government structure deliberately working against the interests of the government to fasten the disintegration among various ethnic communities in the country. Third, community-based media often propagate ethnic nationalism to erode the national unity and solidarity of the people by reporting fake news. Therefore, the study concluded that the key constraints causing Ethiopia's nation-building process and state integration to weaken over the last few years are the absence of media law to shape the media's behaviour pattern, weak leadership, the absence of credible independent civic associations, a lack of political determination to maintain law and order in the country, and the presence of poor media ethics. Media law shall be effectively applied to make community-based media's contribution to nation building and state integration positive as well as to make them accountable for their deeds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Understanding the Jordanian Mediascape: Pressure and Release
- Author
-
Mahadeen, Ebtihal, Jackson, Stevi, Series Editor, Khoo, Olivia, Series Editor, Tang, Denise Tse-Shang, Series Editor, and Mahadeen, Ebtihal
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Political Will and Media Law: A Poland Case Analysis.
- Author
-
Guzek, Damian and Grzesiok-Horosz, Agnieszka
- Subjects
- *
MASS media & politics , *JUDGE-made law , *GOVERNMENT business enterprises , *MASS media industry - Abstract
A significant element of Central and Eastern Europe's democracies backsliding process turns out to be changes in the media law. These changes are now leading to a decline in media freedom. The article attempts to understand this phenomenon by analyzing the process of legal and policy changes in Poland. In the course of the analysis, the reader's attention is drawn to three elements that form the mainline of events related to the weakening of media freedom. These are, in turn, (a) the takeover of public media by influencing the staffing of media companies, (b) introducing a new, completely politicized body into the legal order, which duplicates the already existing and partially politicized media authority, and (c) exerting economic and legal pressure on the media independent of the authorities, so that they can be taken over by state-owned companies or businessmen favoring the authorities. As a whole, this decline in media freedom can be viewed as a strategy that antagonizes society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The Malaysian Media Council: Will Self-Regulation Work?: Learning From the United Kingdom's Press Self-Regulation Experience.
- Author
-
Haron, Hafidz Hakimi and Shuaib, Farid Sufian
- Subjects
- *
FREEDOM of the press , *MALAYSIANS , *CONTENT analysis , *JUDGE-made law , *SECONDARY analysis , *PRESS - Abstract
After the 2018 General Election, the incoming coalition made numerous institutional reform pledges, including the establishment of a Malaysian media council to self-govern the press. Nevertheless, the concept is not new as it was initially proposed in 1973. Following stakeholders' discussions over the past few years, it was decided that a self-regulatory media council should be formed. This is a critical step towards restoring the country's long-suffering press freedom that had been stifled by press regulations. Hence, it is necessary to study the self-regulatory paradigm as Malaysia is moving towards the formation of a self-regulatory media council to govern its press. The United Kingdom's vast experience with media self-regulation may help Malaysian policymakers decide whether to adopt a self-regulatory approach to governance or not. The authors in this study used textual analysis of legislation and case law and secondary data from existing works to examine the proposal of establishing a self-regulatory Malaysian media council. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. How Libel Law Applies to Automated Journalism
- Author
-
Peters, Jonathan
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Australia's News Media Bargaining Code and the global turn towards platform regulation.
- Author
-
Bossio, Diana, Flew, Terry, Meese, James, Leaver, Tama, and Barnet, Belinda
- Subjects
DIGITAL technology ,MASS media policy ,FEDERAL government ,DIGITAL media ,SOCIAL media - Abstract
Governments across the world are struggling to address the market dominance of technology companies through increased regulation. The Australian Federal government found itself leading the world in platform regulation when, in 2021, it enacted the Australian News Media and Digital Platforms Mandatory Bargaining Code. The furore surrounding the introduction of the legislation, and Facebook's subsequent Australian 'news ban' exposed the limits of a regulatory model that has previously left the tech industry to moderate itself. In this paper, we argue the introduction of the Code is a leading example of a global trajectory towards regulatory change, which sees governments move from a reactive regulation model to specific interventions around the governance of digital media spaces. We discuss how best to measure the successes and failures around this more interventionist model through a case study of the implementation of the Code in Australia. More broadly we consider how global platforms have responded, and whether the reform is an effective regulatory model for other national governments to emulate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. 'Street Legal' Openly Shared Learning
- Author
-
Hai-Jew, Shalin and Hai-Jew, Shalin
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. 'Material likely to harm or disturb them': testing the alignment between film and game classification decisions and psychological research evidence.
- Author
-
Handsley, Elizabeth and Warburton, Wayne
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHOLOGICAL research , *CLASSIFICATION , *REVIEW committees , *GAMES - Abstract
This article analyses the practical operation of Australia's National Classification System (NCS) for films and games, to evaluate its alignment with the findings of psychological research.1 Twenty-nine decisions of the Classification Review Board are examined to determine the factors applied in assessing the impact of violent content and drawing the line between the different classification categories. The language used in referring to violent content is analysed to determine the concepts that influence the Board's view about the correct classification. These concepts are then tested against the research evidence on the depictions of violence that create the greatest risk of adverse outcomes for viewers and players. Not all of the concepts used in classification have a basis in the research evidence, and some are directly at odds with that evidence. The article concludes by recommending changes to the rules that could lead to better alignment between classification decisions and the research evidence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. The end of the post-colonial era: The transformation in Israeli media law on the State's 70th anniversary.
- Author
-
Schejter, Amit
- Abstract
Dramatic changes in media law and practice took place on Israel's 70th year of independence: The Press Ordinance was abolished; the Broadcasting Authority (IBA) was replaced by the Israeli Broadcasting Corporation (IBC); and the Second Authority Law (which governs commercial broadcasting) was amended, abolishing the "dual broadcasting model" established in the 1990s. What characterizes these changes is that they mark the breaking up of Israel's media policy structure from its post-colonial roots. The new laws demonstrate for the first time in Israeli media policy history a unique Israeli structure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Premeny tlačového zákona na Slovensku.
- Author
-
BELIANSKÁ, MARCELA
- Subjects
JOURNALISTS ,PUBLISHING ,PRESS - Abstract
The Slovak press law of 2008 became a significant step in the transformation of the media space in Slovakia. After many years the new law replaced the original, nine-time-amended press law of 1966, which was outdated and did not reflect the current needs of journalists, periodical publishers or press agencies. The press law has been amended several times since 2008. This paper presents individual amendments and tries to compare them in order to clearly define the changes that have occurred in the development of the Slovak press law. The paper also describes the changes that await media legislation in 2022. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
34. Fake News and Social Media: Indian Perspective
- Author
-
Bali, Aasita and Desai, Prathik
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Beyond Journalism about Journalism: Amicus Briefs as Metajournalistic Discourse.
- Author
-
Johnson, Brett G., Thomas, Ryan J., and Fuzy, Jeremiah P.
- Subjects
AMICI curiae ,JUDICIAL opinions ,JOURNALISM ,DISCOURSE ,APPELLATE courts ,PUBLIC opinion - Abstract
There is a growing interest in journalism studies in metajournalistic discourse—that is, sites where journalists construct the boundaries and norms of their field. This study highlights a hitherto unstudied site of such discourse: the briefs of amicus curiae that news organizations file in U.S. appellate courts. While other forms of metajournalistic discourse seek to influence journalistic or public opinion, amicus briefs represent an attempt by journalists to influence judicial opinion and, consequently, the laws affecting U.S. journalism. Our analysis of 168 briefs finds that journalism amici employed a strategy that relied most heavily on several different variations of a discourse of inclusion, while a discourse of exclusion was used sparingly as an auxiliary to discourses of inclusion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Das NetzDG in der praktischen Anwendung
- Author
-
Liesching, Marc, Funke, Chantal, Hermann, Alexander, Kneschke, Christin, Michnic, Carolin, Nguyen, Linh, Prüßner, Johanna, Rudolph, Sarah, and Zschammer, Vivien
- Subjects
Network Enforcement Act ,NetzDG ,Media law ,Facebook ,Twitter ,Google ,Social networks ,Overblocking ,Netzwerkdurchsetzungsgesetz ,Medienrecht ,Soziale Netzwerke ,bic Book Industry Communication::J Society & social sciences::JF Society & culture: general::JFD Media studies - Abstract
What are the practical effects of the Network Enforcement Act, which came into force in 2017 and was controversial from the start? Which compliance structures have the big three social networks Facebook, YouTube and Twitter implemented with regard to the removal of illegal user content? In addition to a presentation and evaluation of previous studies, monitoring reports and NetzDG reports from the social networks, possible criteria for “over-blocking” are identified and subsumed in this third volume of the series. On the occasion of the NetzDG evaluation commissioned by the federal government, the study was carried out additionally and independently of this. It is not based on any commissioning by public or private bodies., Welche Auswirkungen hat das 2017 in Kraft getretene, von Beginn an umstrittene Netzwerkdurchsetzungsgesetz in der praktischen Anwendung? Welche Compliance-Strukturen haben die großen drei Sozialen Netzwerke Facebook, YouTube und Twitter in Bezug auf die Entfernung rechtswidriger Nutzerinhalte umgesetzt? Neben einer Darstellung und Bewertung bisheriger Studien, Monitoring-Berichte und NetzDG-Reports der Sozialen Netzwerke werden im vorliegenden dritten Band der Schriftenreihe auch mögliche Kriterien für ein “Overblocking” eruiert und subsumiert. Die Studie ist aus Anlass der von der Bundesregierung beauftragten NetzDG-Evaluation zusätzlich und unabhängig hiervon durchgeführt worden. Ihr liegt keine Beauftragung durch öffentliche oder private Stellen zugrunde.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. YouTube vs. GEMA
- Author
-
Stade, Philip
- Subjects
YouTube ,GEMA ,social media ,music industry ,streaming ,Cultural Studies ,Popular Music Studies ,media law ,sampling ,copyright ,intellectual property rights ,bic Book Industry Communication::K Economics, finance, business & management::KN Industry & industrial studies::KNT Media, information & communication industries::KNTF Music industry ,bic Book Industry Communication::L Law::LN Laws of Specific jurisdictions::LNR Intellectual property law::LNRC Copyright law ,bic Book Industry Communication::J Society & social sciences::JF Society & culture: general::JFD Media studies ,bic Book Industry Communication::A The arts::AV Music::AVX Music recording & reproduction - Abstract
»This video is not available in your country.« With this sentence, the video platform YouTube fueled many years of dispute with the German collecting society GEMA. Numerous online discussions focused on the appropriate remuneration for music streaming – GEMA bashing followed. Music and copyright have always been a contentious issue. Digitization set in motion a process that changed the way music and other creative goods are produced, consumed, distributed and exploited. This break undermined previous business models of the music industry and shook basic assumptions in the understanding of copyright. Philip Stade focuses on the particular online discourse YouTube vs. GEMA and, in the spirit of cultural studies, opens up interdisciplinary and historical perspectives on the fields of music business, copyright and capitalism in the digital transformation. The focus is on hegemonic strategies and the central role of social media. Even though the social and economic upheavals of the digital transformation are far from complete, Stade precisely elaborates which overarching shifts are taking place in the relationship between exclusive control and free access. For we are only just beginning to understand how digital capitalism works., »Dieses Video ist in deinem Land leider nicht verfügbar.« Mit diesem Satz befeuerte die Video-Plattform YouTube die jahrelange Auseinandersetzung mit der deutschen Verwertungsgesellschaft GEMA. In zahlreichen Online-Diskussionen ging es um die angemessene Vergütung für das Musikstreaming - das GEMA-Bashing folgte. Musik und Urheberrecht waren und sind ein konfliktreiches Thema. Mit der Digitalisierung setzte ein Prozess ein, der die Art veränderte, Musik und andere kreative Güter zu produzieren, zu konsumieren, zu verbreiten und zu verwerten. Diese Zäsur untergrub bisherige Geschäftsmodelle der Musikwirtschaft und erschütterte Grundannahmen im Urheberrechtsverständnis. Philip Stade richtet den Blick auf den besonderen Online-Diskurs YouTube vs. GEMA und eröffnet im Sinne der Cultural Studies interdisziplinäre und historische Sichtweisen auf die Felder Musikwirtschaft, Urheberrecht und Kapitalismus im digitalen Wandel. Im Fokus stehen dabei hegemoniale Strategien sowie die zentrale Rolle Sozialer Medien. Auch wenn die gesellschaftlichen und ökonomischen Umwälzungen des digitalen Wandels längst nicht abgeschlossen sind, arbeitet Stade präzise heraus, welche übergeordneten Verschiebungen im Verhältnis von exklusiver Kontrolle und freiem Zugang stattfinden. Denn wir beginnen gerade erst zu verstehen, wie der digitale Kapitalismus funktioniert.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The 'full liberty of public writers' : special treatment of journalism in English law
- Author
-
Danbury, Richard M. and Young, Alison L.
- Subjects
343.099 ,Media Law ,Constitutional & administrative law ,Press freedom in English law ,Media freedom in English law ,journalism ,contemporary theories of human rights ,information law ,Leveson Inquiry ,media plurality ,journalists' rights ,media diversity ,contempt of court ,defamation ,privacy ,confidence ,source protection (Norwich Pharmacal orders) ,media regulation ,press regulation. - Abstract
This thesis investigates whether institutional journalism should receive special treatment at the hands of the law. Special treatment encompasses the affording of benefits to and the imposition of liabilities on journalistic institutions and the individuals who work for them. The arguments against special treatment are pragmatic and theoretical: pragmatic arguments emphasise, inter alia, the difficulty of providing a definition of journalism, and theoretical arguments emphasise the difficulty in explaining why special treatment can be coherent. The former can be addressed by describing how special treatment is already afforded to institutional journalism, both liabilities and benefits, to individuals and institutions, and showing that some of the problems foreseen by the pragmatic arguments have not proved as difficult as they appear. The arguments that special treatment is incoherent can be addressed by arguing that the credibility and assessability of institutional journalism still provide a prima facie rationale for special treatment irrespective of the rise of public speech on the Internet, when combined with the integral nature of journalism to democracy. Two basic arguments are advanced why this is so. The first, the free speech values argument, is a consequentialist account that holds that special treatment is appropriate when (or because) institutional journalism contributes to free speech values. It is attractive, but presents difficulties, both when considered in the abstract and when applied to the free speech value of democracy. The second, a rights-based argument, based on the notion that freedoms of speech and of the Press are distinguishable, can be based on either on Dworkin’s theory of rights as trumps or Raz’s theory of rights as interests. Raz’s account is preferable, as it complements the free speech values thesis in explaining the coherence of special treatment.
- Published
- 2014
39. Post-conflict Reconstruction of Trust in the Media
- Author
-
Metcalf, Katrin Nyman, Sayapin, Sergey, editor, and Tsybulenko, Evhen, editor
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Conduct, Affiliation, and Messages: A Typology of Statutes Addressing Political Deception
- Author
-
Spicer, Robert N. and Spicer, Robert N.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Media Arbitration Schemes: Addressing the Backlog of Defamation Cases in Malaysia.
- Author
-
Suhaimi, Imaduddin
- Subjects
LIBEL & slander ,CRIMINAL courts ,STATUTORY interpretation ,ARBITRATION (Administrative law) - Abstract
The rise in defamation claims in Malaysia has placed an onerous workload on the courts to deal with such matters. Against this backdrop, Hamid Sultan Abu Backer JC (as his Lordship then was) (Hamid Sultan JC) suggested in two separate High Court decisions that to alleviate the courts' burden, matters pertaining to libel and slander ought to be constrained to the criminal courts through appropriate statutory amendments, including to the Criminal Procedure Code (Malaysia). In this paper, the author cautions against the learned Hamid Sultan JC's recommendations and proffers an alternative proposal in the form of media arbitration schemes to handle the growing influx of defamation claims. In particular, the salient features of the IMPRESS and IPSO Schemes from the United Kingdom are scrutinized in detail and measured in terms of suitability for a potential arbitration scheme in the Malaysian jurisdiction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The Airwaves Belong to the People: A Critical Analysis of Radio Broadcasting and Licensing in Zimbabwe.
- Author
-
Alfandika, Last and Gwindingwe, Gift
- Subjects
DEMOCRACY ,SOCIAL media ,PLURALISM ,PUBLIC interest - Abstract
This article reports on a study that focused on the radio broadcasting and licensing scene in Zimbabwe between 2000 and 2020. The study interrogated the sincerity of the Zimbabwean government in advancing both media pluralism and diversity. Opposition political parties and civic organisations pressured Zimbabwe into adopting a liberal approach that they hoped would widen the political and media space. The study examined how the government has taken and implemented such a liberal approach. Drawing on the competitive authoritarianism concept, the study argued that the cosmetic application of contested and undemocratic media laws that pretended to be democratising the media was indeed gagging democracy. This is called a pseudo-progressive stance. The study gathered data using qualitative interviews with three media activists, three policymakers, two media professionals, and two media scholars in Zimbabwe. In total, 10 qualitative key informant in-depth interviews were carried out. The analysis revealed a silhouette of grandiose but empty media laws that have continued to impede democracy in Zimbabwe. Therefore, the study concluded that the monopoly of media influence and concentration of broadcasting media ownership within the ruling party is dire and not conducive to the development of diverse and creative content for the nation. Thus, collaborative efforts are needed for real change to be achieved in the broadcasting media in Zimbabwe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. MEDIA REPRESENTATION OF THE VICTIMS OF TERRORIST ATTACKS. AN ETHICAL AND LEGAL ANALYSIS OF ARTICLES PUBLISHED IN LE MONDE.
- Author
-
AŞTEFANEI, IULIA-SÎNZIANA
- Subjects
JOURNALISTIC ethics ,MENTAL representation ,TERRORISM ,CODES of ethics ,PRESS ,MASS media ethics ,SEPTEMBER 11 Terrorist Attacks, 2001 ,FREEDOM of expression - Abstract
The topic of this paper explores the online media representation of the victims of terrorist attacks in relation to the ethical and legal frameworks aimed at protecting the people. Despite the fact that freedom of expression should not be restricted under any circumstances, the news media outlets ought to take into consideration the legal acts, the moral behaviors and ethical principles when publishing and disseminating information about the terrorist attacks. Journalists should aim to pursue the purpose of this profession with the intent of remaining objective and upright while respecting the human rights. The research of this paper focuses on the interdependence between journalism, ethics and law by analyzing how Le Monde covered some of the terrorist attacks which happened in Europe. The importance of ethics in journalism had been acknowledged by analyzing the role of the regulatory organizations for the press, as well as the professional standards which were set in order to guide the journalists and protect the people. The in-depth analysis of the media representation of the victims of terrorist attacks highlighted the fact that the journalistic ethical codes might have the power to strengthen the protection of the people in the press, while assessing the noninfringement or the breach of the supranational and national legislation enacted by the European Union and France. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Innovation in Arabic online newsrooms : a comparative study of the social shaping of multimedia adoption in Aljazeera Net, Almassae and Almasry Alyoum in the context of the Arab Spring
- Author
-
Abdel-Sattar, Nesrine M. A. K. and Dutton, William
- Subjects
070.4 ,Middle East ,Arabic ,Media Law ,Media and Public Policy ,News media, journalism, publishing ,Journalism (political science) ,Internet research ,Internet and everyday life ,Internet and governance and democracy ,Shaping the Internet ,arabic newsrooms ,Arab spring ,Aljazeera ,Egypt ,Morocco ,Qatar ,multimedia innovation ,online news ,sociology of newsrooms ,social shaping of technology - Abstract
This study focuses on the factors shaping innovation in online newsrooms in three nations of the Arab World, with particular interest in the adoption of multimedia news innovations. Applying theoretical perspectives from the social shaping of technology and the diffusion of innovation literature, this study sought to identify the key factors shaping the innovation process. Field studies were based in three Arabic newsrooms: Aljazeera Net in Qatar, Almasry Alyoum in Egypt, and Almassae in Morocco. The case studies are grounded in two weeks of participant-observation field research within each online newsroom, along with over 100 in-depth interviews with those involved in the production of online news, and online archival reviews of the three news portals since their inception. Field research began with participant observation at Aljazeera in 2010, prior to the uprisings of the Arab Spring, and continued through early 2013. The political context of each newsroom during the field research became a major aspect of the innovation process of each case study. The thesis reinforces a wide range of social, economic, and organizational factors in the adoption and adaptation of multimedia technologies in the newsrooms studied, supporting earlier research on newsroom innovation across other regions of the world. For example, conceptions about ‘ideal’ industry multimedia models for the modern newsroom were important in each case. However, in the political context of events related to the Arab Spring, the overriding importance of the larger political context emerged in each case. The significance of this observation suggests that research on news organizations cannot take the political context for granted and should more explicitly embed it in discussion of the social shaping of innovation, even under more stable and liberal political conditions. There is a relative lack of systematic empirical research on Arabic newsrooms among studies of news innovation. Looking at the political context of emergent or weak democracies and their influence on modern multimedia newsrooms especially during crisis events, therefore, can contribute to the development of theory and research in Western democracies; and reintroduce politics into theories of innovation within modern newsrooms. This study suggests that future scholarship brings politics into the study of the social shaping of newsroom innovation without losing the many significant advances of existing research in more liberal democratic Western contexts of the multimedia newsroom.
- Published
- 2013
45. The liability of internet intermediaries
- Author
-
Riordan, Jaani and Bagshaw, Roderick
- Subjects
343.09 ,Intellectual property ,Law and the internet ,Human rights ,Media Law ,EU Law ,European Law ,European and comparative law ,internet ,intermediaries ,internet service providers ,search engines ,internet law ,copyright ,defamation ,anonymity ,social networks ,remedies ,private law ,English law ,European Union law ,TRIPS Agreement - Abstract
Internet intermediaries facilitate a wide range of conduct using services supplied over the layered architecture of modern communications networks. Members of this class include search engines, social networks, internet service providers, website operators, hosts, and payment gateways, which together exert a critical and growing influence upon national and global economies, governments and cultures. This research examines who should face legal responsibility when wrongdoers utilise these services tortiously to cause harm to others. It has three parts. Part 1 seeks to understand the nature of an intermediary and how its liability differs from the liability of primary defendants. It classifies intermediaries according to a new layered, functional taxonomy and argues that many instances of secondary liability in English private law reflect shared features and underlying policies, including optimal loss-avoidance and derivative liability premised on an assumption of responsibility. Part 2 analyses intermediaries’ monetary liability for secondary wrongdoing in two areas of English law: defamation and copyright. It traces the historical evolution of these doctrines at successive junctures in communications technology, before identifying and defending limits on that liability which derive from three main sources: (i) in-built limits contained in definitions of secondary wrongdoing; (ii) European safe harbours and general limits on remedies; and (iii) statutory defences and exceptions. Part 3 examines intermediaries’ non-monetary liability, in particular their obligations to disclose information about alleged primary wrongdoers and to cease facilitating wrongdoing where it is necessary and proportionate to do so. It proposes a new suite of non-facilitation remedies designed to restrict access to tortious internet materials, remove such materials from search engines, and reduce the profitability of wrongdoing. It concludes with several recommendations to improve the effectiveness and proportionality of remedies by reference to considerations of architecture, anonymity, efficient procedures, and fundamental rights.
- Published
- 2013
46. Democracia y medios de comunicación en Argentina: Prensa y Kirchnerismo.
- Author
-
Neira Carrión, Natalia
- Subjects
MASS media ,DISINFORMATION ,SOCIAL skills ,DEMOCRACY ,SOCIAL context ,POLITICAL participation ,TWENTY-first century - Abstract
Copyright of Doxa Comunicación is the property of Fundacion Universitaria San Pablo - CEU and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
47. Libel and Defamation in Journalism
- Author
-
Kenyon, Andrew T.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Medialex
- Subjects
communication law ,media law ,internet law ,telecommunications law ,media ethic ,radio and tv law ,Law - Published
- 2021
49. The media and journalism challenges in Melanesia
- Author
-
Shailendra Singh
- Subjects
culture ,external threats ,Fiji ,internal threats ,media law ,Melanesia ,Communication. Mass media ,P87-96 ,Journalism. The periodical press, etc. ,PN4699-5650 - Abstract
This article advances discussions on media freedom and media development in Melanesia through the introduction of an ‘external’ and ‘internal’ threats analytical framework. Singling out the challenges and categorising them into these two main groups provides a clearer picture of the issues at stake, the links between them, and the need to address the situation holistically. External threats emanating from outside the media sector are often seen as more serious, and they often overshadow internal threats, which come from within the media sector. This article argues that both sets of threats have serious impacts on media and journalism in their own ways, and that both should be regarded equally. Furthermore, the linkages between these threats mean that one cannot be properly addressed without addressing the other. A key outcome of this discussion is a clearer understanding of how little control the media have over both external and internal threats, and how stakeholder support is needed to overcome some of the issues. Because good journalism benefits the public, this article argues for increased public support for high-quality journalism that delivers a public benefit.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. EDITORIAL: Melanesian media freedom
- Author
-
Kasun Ubayasiri, Faith Valencia-Forrester, Tess Newton Cain, and David Robie
- Subjects
editorial ,journalism ,media freedom ,media law ,Melanesia ,Melanesia Media Freedom Forum ,Communication. Mass media ,P87-96 ,Journalism. The periodical press, etc. ,PN4699-5650 - Abstract
The sovereign states of Melanesia are countries where the yoke of colonialism and struggles for independence are still within living memory. There are territories within Melanesia where the questions and complexities associated with achieving self-determination are very much live issues. In West Papua, this issue is one over which blood continues to be spilt. As these countries, and the communities within them, grapple with political-economic and technical shifts, the need for independent journalism is self-evident. However, journalists, editors, publishers and media owners face a barrage of challenges to their ability to operate free from repression or coercion by those who wield power in their societies. Some of these challenges are overt and can extend to threats or physical intimidation. Others are more subtle but no less pervasive and damaging. They lead to a narrowing of the media landscape, the loss of talented professionals to other areas, the rise of self-censorship, and more.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.