Civil Rights - General, Civil Liberties, Civil Rights - United States, British Law - General & Miscellaneous, United States Constitutions - Federal & State, Civil Rights - Privacy, Constitutions, Communications & Media Law, Censorship
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Overview
The Englishman's home is his castle, or so generations of Britons ha thought. The British have long been obsessed with privacy and this obsession has provoked considerable debate amongst legislators, lawyers and the media. In recent years, the controversy has raged on with, on one hand, the media claiming public interest, and on the other, public figures claiming invasion of their privacy.
This title argues that the freedom of the press can be reconciled with the right of privacy. Following an account of the justification for free speech and privacy and a careful analysis of the law, the author argues that the combined force of three recent developments provides adequate means for the exercise of judicial recognition of individual's right to privacy: the expanding remedy for breach of confidence the revived action for the infliction of emotional distress and the growing influence of international recognition of "privacy" especially the jurisprudence of the European Convention of Human Rights.
Book Details
Published
August 28, 1995
Publisher
Blackstone Press
Pages
198
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781854314543