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Mass Media Law

The Printing Press to the Internet

by Arthur S. Hayes (Author)
©2013 Textbook XIV, 304 Pages

Summary

Digital media law is now the dynamic legal territory. Mass Media Law: The Printing Press to the Internet is a textbook designed to introduce students to the panoply of legal theories raised by the Internet revolution as well as those supporting traditional media. The book takes a historical approach beginning with the printing press and the telegraph and proceeding to the digital technologies of today, such as social media and search engines. Concepts such as defamation, broadcast regulation, privacy, and free expression are covered along with new media legal theories including Internet exceptionalism, cyber libertarianism, and digital speech and democratic culture. These are introduced to explain why traditional theories such as First Amendment medium-specific analysis, common carriage, and network neutrality are just as relevant today as they were in the early twentieth century. In order to help readers develop critical reasoning skills, each chapter opens with a highly readable realworld vignette and goes on to identify and explain legal doctrines and tests. Key passages from court opinions are highlighted, and each chapter closes with a list of online media law resources and thought-provoking questions, including legal hypotheticals, to give readers a solid understanding of the area in question. Mass Media Law is designed to be the main text and a valuable resource for undergraduate and graduate courses covering media, mass communication, free expression, and journalism law.

Details

Pages
XIV, 304
Year
2013
ISBN (PDF)
9781453910436
ISBN (Softcover)
9781433107566
DOI
10.3726/978-1-4539-1043-6
Language
English
Publication date
2013 (June)
Keywords
defamation privacy free expression cyber libertarianism democratic culture
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, Oxford, Wien, 2013. 320 pp., num. ill.

Biographical notes

Arthur S. Hayes (Author)

Arthur S. Hayes (MA, Fordham University; J.D., Quinnipiac University), has taught media law to undergraduate and graduate students at New York University, Quinnipiac University, and now at Fordham University for more than 15 years. Before joining academia, he was a legal journalist and worked as a staff writer for the American Lawyer magazine, and The Wall Street Journal, and as an associate editor with the National Law Journal. He is the author of Press Critics Are the Fifth Estate: Media Watchdogs in America which was selected as a finalist for the 2009 Tankard Book Award.

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Title: Mass Media Law
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320 pages