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Comparative Privacy and Defamation
Edited by András Koltay and Paul Wragg
Providing comparative analysis that examines both Western and non-Western legal systems, this wide-ranging Handbook expands and enriches the existing privacy and defamation law literature and addresses the fundamental issues facing today’s scholars and practitioners. Comparative Privacy and Defamation provides insightful commentary on issues of theory and doctrine, including the challenges of General Data Protection Regulations (GDPR) and the impact of new technologies on the law.
Handbook
- Published in print:
- 08 Jul 2020
- ISBN:
- 9781788970587
- eISBN:
- 9781788970594
- Pages:
- 480
Show Summary Details
- Comparative Privacy and Defamation
- Copyright
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- Chapter 1: Introduction
- Chapter 2: The origins and development of the right to privacy
- Chapter 3: Privacy and incrementalism
- Chapter 4: Theories of reputation
- Chapter 5: Separated by a common language: the antipaternalism principle in US and English defamation and privacy law
- Chapter 6: Weighing content: can expression be more or less important? Categorical or case by case balancing and its (respective) disposition to rank relevance of communication
- Chapter 7: What is it the public has a right to know? The right to privacy for public officials and the right of access to official documents – European and Swedish perspectives
- Chapter 8: Do we need to separate privacy and reputation? USA, Europe and Korea compared
- Chapter 9: Public image (un)limited: privacy rights of the photographic subject in England and New York compared
- Chapter 10: What newsworthiness means
- Chapter 11: Defamation by photo manipulation under New Zealand law
- Chapter 12: A European and German perspective on data protection law in a digitised world
- Chapter 13: Right to be forgotten in the global information economy
- Chapter 14: Enforcing privacy through individual data access rights: a comparative study
- Chapter 15: Defamation: a half-century of changes (more or less)
- Chapter 16: A comparative analysis of the treatment of corporate reputation in Australia and the UK
- Chapter 17: Liability of internet intermediaries for defamation: beyond publication and innocent dissemination
- Chapter 18: Defamation on the internet: the role and responsibilities of gatekeepers
- Chapter 19: Privacy, remedies and comity: the emerging problem of global injunctions and some preliminary thoughts on how best to address it
- Chapter 20: Free speech and the rights relating to personality involving politicians in French law
- Chapter 21: Italian defamation and privacy law from a comparative perspective
- Chapter 22: Canadian defamation and privacy law in comparative context
- Chapter 23: Privacy and defamation in Australia – a post-colonial tango
- Chapter 24: South Africas reasonable publication defence and the United Kingdoms public interest defence: two sides of the same coin?
- Chapter 25: Defamation and privacy law in Japan – from a comparative perspective
- Chapter 26: The Chinese defamation law four decades on (1979–2019): legal rules versus political uncertainties
- Index
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Contributors
Handbook Chapter
- Published:
- 8 July 2020
- Category:
- Handbook Chapter
- Pages:
- viii–ix (2 total)
Collection:
Law 2020
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- Comparative Privacy and Defamation
- Copyright
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- Chapter 1: Introduction
- Chapter 2: The origins and development of the right to privacy
- Chapter 3: Privacy and incrementalism
- Chapter 4: Theories of reputation
- Chapter 5: Separated by a common language: the antipaternalism principle in US and English defamation and privacy law
- Chapter 6: Weighing content: can expression be more or less important? Categorical or case by case balancing and its (respective) disposition to rank relevance of communication
- Chapter 7: What is it the public has a right to know? The right to privacy for public officials and the right of access to official documents – European and Swedish perspectives
- Chapter 8: Do we need to separate privacy and reputation? USA, Europe and Korea compared
- Chapter 9: Public image (un)limited: privacy rights of the photographic subject in England and New York compared
- Chapter 10: What newsworthiness means
- Chapter 11: Defamation by photo manipulation under New Zealand law
- Chapter 12: A European and German perspective on data protection law in a digitised world
- Chapter 13: Right to be forgotten in the global information economy
- Chapter 14: Enforcing privacy through individual data access rights: a comparative study
- Chapter 15: Defamation: a half-century of changes (more or less)
- Chapter 16: A comparative analysis of the treatment of corporate reputation in Australia and the UK
- Chapter 17: Liability of internet intermediaries for defamation: beyond publication and innocent dissemination
- Chapter 18: Defamation on the internet: the role and responsibilities of gatekeepers
- Chapter 19: Privacy, remedies and comity: the emerging problem of global injunctions and some preliminary thoughts on how best to address it
- Chapter 20: Free speech and the rights relating to personality involving politicians in French law
- Chapter 21: Italian defamation and privacy law from a comparative perspective
- Chapter 22: Canadian defamation and privacy law in comparative context
- Chapter 23: Privacy and defamation in Australia – a post-colonial tango
- Chapter 24: South Africas reasonable publication defence and the United Kingdoms public interest defence: two sides of the same coin?
- Chapter 25: Defamation and privacy law in Japan – from a comparative perspective
- Chapter 26: The Chinese defamation law four decades on (1979–2019): legal rules versus political uncertainties
- Index