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Audio-visual Coverage of Courts: A Comparative Analysis
 
 
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Audio-visual Coverage of Courts: A Comparative Analysis [Hardcover]

Daniel Stepniak (Author)

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Book Description

0521875277 978-0521875271 March 17, 2008 1
Researched over a period of 15 years by an author who has personally participated in the debate internationally, Audio-Visual Coverage of Courts is the first book to undertake a comprehensive comparative study of televised court proceedings in Great Britain, the United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. Exhaustive in his identification and analysis of relevant law and key developments, Daniel Stepniak draws on hitherto unpublished primary sources to undertake a largely unprecedented examination of the experiences of non-US courts. Through analysis of the regulation of audio-visual reporting, the author outlines a theoretical framework and proven action plan for the attainment of the potential benefits of audio-visual coverage, arguing that technological advances, acknowledgement of legally enforceable rights and, above all, judicial recognition of courts' vested interest in facilitating coverage in order to promote greater public access and understanding of judicial proceedings, have led audio-visual coverage to be increasingly perceived as desirable.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

'... an excellent review of the state of play within the debate surrounding the presence of cameras in courtrooms ... The author is to be highly commended ... Audio-visual Coverage of Courts ... is well-written, highly accessible and clearly argued throughout ... a fine book indeed, and ought to be considered both a benchmark and a starting point for any serious future study on this emotive and important aspect of open justice within common law jurisdictions and beyond.' Communications Law

Book Description

Through a comprehensive and a largely unprecedented comparative analysis of the cameras-in-courts experiences and regulation of audio-visual reporting in the United Kingdom, the United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand, Daniel Stepniak proposes a theoretical framework and proven action plan for the attainment of the potential benefits of audio-visual coverage.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
criminal process, judiciary law, courtroom televising, court televising, televising courtroom proceedings, hoc televising, electronic media coverage, experimental televising, overlay footage, regulating coverage, presumptive constitutional right, television camera access, courtroom footage, regarding court proceedings, proposed televising, electronic media access, barring cameras, televised court proceedings, courtroom reporting, sub judice laws, courtroom publicity, extended media coverage, expanded media coverage, courtroom photography, open justice
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Electronic Media Coverage of Courts, New Zealand, Supreme Court, New York, United States, High Court, Federal Court, Lord Hope, First Amendment, Justice Advisory Committee, Court of Appeal, Justice Bennett, Sir Ivor Richardson, The Hon, Justice Teague, Law Lords, Chief Justice, Lord Hutton, Issues Paper, Managing Prejudicial Publicity, Courts Consultative Committee, Daniel Stepniak, Lord Chancellor, Law Reform Commission, Community Law Reform Program
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Surprise Me!
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