EUROPEAN AND INTERNATIONAL MEDIA LAW
Language: English Publication details: Great Britain Cambridge University Press 2017/01/01Edition: 1Description: 583ISBN:- 9781107026582
- 343.099 OST/EU
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Reference | Ernakulam Public Library Reference | Reference | 343.099 OST/EU (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not for loan | E193637 |
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343.052 VIN/TA TAXMANNS DIRECT TAXES : LAW & PRACTICE | 343.053 RAM/ES ESTATE DUTY ACT , 1953 | 343.07 ANO/ME MEDICAL NEGLIGENCE AND LEGAL REMEDIES | 343.099 OST/EU EUROPEAN AND INTERNATIONAL MEDIA LAW | 343.0998 LAW LAW OF THE PRESS | 343.540202462 RAM/WH WHAT EVERY ENGINEER SHOULD KNOW ABOUT IT | 343.540944 MOT MOTOR VEHICLES ACT,1988 : |
Over the past half century, western democracies have lead efforts to entrench the economic and political values of liberal democracy into the foundations of European and international public order. The relationship between the media and the state has been at the heart of those efforts. In this relationship, often framed in constitutional principles, the liberal democratic state has celebrated the liberty to publish information and entertainment content, while also forcefully setting the limits for harmful or offensive expression. It is thus a relationship rooted in the state’s need for security, authority and legitimacy as much as liberalism’s powerful arguments for economic and political freedom. In Europe, this long running endeavour has yielded a market based, liberal democratic regional order that has profound consequences for media law and policy in the member states. This book examines the economic and human rights aspects of European media law, which is not only comparatively coherent but also increasingly restrictive, rejecting alternatives that are well within the traditions of liberalism. Parallel efforts in the international sphere have been markedly less successful. In international media law, the division between trade and human rights remains largely unbridged and, in the latter field, liberal democratic concepts of free speech are influential but rarely decisive. States are moreover quick to assert their rights to autonomy. Yet the current communications revolution has overturned fundamental assumptions about the media and the state around the world, eroding the boundaries between domestic and foreign media as well as mass and personal communication. As this book explains, European and international media law are changing rapidly as states to attempt to manage the benefits and hazards of a globalised public information sphere.
1. Case Example
a. What is Media Law
b. A Privileged Protection For Journalistic Media
c. The Distinction Between The Journalistic Media and Other d.ontent Providers
e. The Evaluation Of Media Content
f. The Transnational European and International Dimensions of Media Law
g. Jurisdiction and the Choices Of the Applicable Law
h. The Council of Europe
i. The European Union
j. International Media Law
2. Fundamentals Right and Principles
a. Human Right Framework
b. Economic Right Framework
c. the International Market Provisions of the TFEU
d. The WTO
e. The Right Content Providers
f. Freedom of Expression
g.Freedom of Expression Theory
h. Right To Impart Information and Ideas etc...
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