- 256 pages
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
Regulating the Press
About This Book
A free press is the cornerstone of democracy. Does this then give the press the right to print inaccurate material with relative impunity? Should the public have a statutory right of reply to inaccuracy in the press? And how free is the press in a world of converging technologies and crossmedia ownership? Clive Soley and Tom O'Malley set the issues of press regulation in their historical context, focusing on the period after 1945. They specifically look at the history and record of the Press Council and assess the performance of the Press Complaints Commission. The book analyses the arguments surrounding attempts to improve standards by introducing statutory rights for the public, and the reasons for the failure of these initiatives. Focusing on issues of principle such as accuracy, misrepresentation and privacy, the authors re-examine the ways in which debates over press freedom versus regulation illuminate the fundamental conflicts between a fully accountable press and the economic imperatives of the free market economy.
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Table of contents
- Contents
- Introduction
- PART I: The History of Self-Regulation
- 1. Putting the Press into Perspective
- 2 The Meanings of the Press
- 3 Working on the Law: Employers, Journalists and the Legal Framework
- 4 A Sense of Doubt: The Origins and History of Self-Regulation up to 1972
- 5 Nothing Resolved: Self-Regulation, 1972 -98
- 6 Organising and Defining Self- Regulation
- 7 Self-Regulation at Work - An Overview
- PART II: Cases and Issues
- 8 The Problem of Accuracy in the UK Press in the 1980s and 1990s
- 9 The Distorting Mirror. The Problem of Misrepresentation in the Press in the 1980s and 1990s
- 10 Privacy and Self-Regulation
- PART III: Reforming Regulation
- 11 Rights and Responsibilities: The Need for Reform
- Appendix Freedom and Responsibility of the Press Bill
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index