Skip to main content Site map

Privacy and the Press


Privacy and the Press

Paperback by Rozenberg, Joshua (Legal Editor, Daily Telegraph)

Privacy and the Press

£38.99

ISBN:
9780199288472
Publication Date:
28 Jul 2005
Language:
English
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Pages:
304 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 7 - 12 May 2024
Privacy and the Press

Description

Do we need a law of privacy? Should judges be allowed to stop us reading about a footballer's adultery or enjoying pictures of a film star's wedding? Is a super-model's cocaine addiction something that she should be allowed to keep private? And aren't we entitled to walk down the street without having our most intimate activities recorded on security cameras and broadcast to the world? These questions have divided not only the country but also our most senior judges. Drawing a line between justified and unjustified intrusion places great stresses on our legal traditions with some judges favouring an approach which stretches existing laws to grant relief to deserving victims, whilst other judges feel that it would be more honest to simply recognize privacy as a new human right. The latter approach creates further problems: should it be up to Parliament alone to create such a right? And what about free speech? Do the newspapers and the public not have rights too? The issues raised are often highly emotive. Newspapers are not allowed to identify Thompson and Venables, the young men who murdered two-year-old James Bulger, because their lives would be in danger. Nobody may identify Mary Bell, who also killed when she was a child, even though there was no such risk. Will paedophiles be the next to demand lifelong anonymity? Steering a course through this minefield requires a grasp of legal concepts and principles and an understanding of how the law develops. This book explores how the English legal system has had to blend old laws on confidentiality with modern human rights law in order to deal with these problematic issues. Written for non-specialists by one of Britain s best known legal journalists, this book provides a uniquely accessible guide to the legal aspects of this public debate.

Contents

1. Confidence or Privacy? ; 2. Hello! OK? ; 3. A Free Press ; 4. Respecting Private Life ; 5. Privacy and the Press ; 6. A Chilling Effect ; 7. Responsible Journalism

Back

University of Sunderland logo