Introduction, Stefaan Verhulst and Monroe Price Part 1: Media Policy and Institutional Design 1. Tracing Media Policy Decisions: Of Stakeholders, Networks and Advocacy Coalitions, Hilde Van Den Bulck 2. Rational Legal Authority, Formal and Informal Rules in the News Media, Paolo Mancini 3. Independence in Media Regulation, Thomas Gibbons 4. Mainstreaming EU cultural policies internally and externally: caught between subsidiarity and global subsidiarity?, Jan Loisen, Caroline Pauwels and Karen Donders 5. Commercial Content and its Relationship to Media Content: Commodification and Trust, Lesley Hitchens Part 2: Media Policy, Free Speech and Citizenship 6. The European Court of Human Rights, Media Freedom and Democracy, Rónán Ó Fathaigh and Dirk Voorhoof 7. The different concepts of free expression and its link with democracy, public sphere and other concepts, Joan Barata Mir 8. Internet Freedom, the Public Sphere and Constitutional Guarantees: a European Perspective, Bernd Holznagel 9. Freedom of Expression and the Right of Access to the Internet: A New Fundamental Right?, Nicola Lucchi 10. From Freedom of Speech to the Right to Communicate, Daithí Mac Síthigh 11. Public Service Media Narratives, Ellen Goodman 12. Accountability, Citizenship and Public Media, Richard Collins Part 3: Media Policy and Comparative Perspectives 13. Customary Law and Media Regulation in Conflict and Post-Conflict States, Nicole Stremlau 14. In the Name of God: Faith-based Internet Censorship in Majority Muslim Countries, Helmi Noman 15. Media Control with Chinese Characteristics, Rogier Creemers 16. Social Dynamics in the Evolution of China’s Internet Content Control Regime, Guobin Yang 17. Between Sedition and Seduction: Thinking Censorship in South Asia, William Mazzarella and Raminder Kaur Part 4: Media Policy and Media Governance 18. Controlling New Media (Without the Law), Mira Burri 19. Are states still important? Reflections on the nexus between national and global media and communication policy, Marc Raboy and Aysha Mawani 20. International Governance in a New Media Environment, Rolf Weber 21. Self- and Co-Regulation: Evidence, Legitimacy and Governance, Michael Latzer, Natascha Just, Florian Saurwein 22. Media Governance and Technology: From "Code is Law" to Governance Constellations, Christian Katzenbach 23. Governing Media Through Technology: The Empowerment Perspective, Antonios Broumas Part 5: Media Policy and Technological Transformation 24. Do we know a medium when we see one? New media ecology, Karol Jakubowicz 25. To 'be let alone' in social media: the market and regulation of privacy, Katharine Sarikakis and Dimitris Tsapogas 26. Self-Regulation and the Construction of Media Harms: Notes on the Battle over Digital "Privacy", Joseph Turow 27. Technological Innovation, Paradox and ICTs: Challenges for Governing Institutions, Robin Mansell 28. Net Neutrality and Audiovisual Services, Nico van Eijk 29. Network Neutrality and the Need for a Technological Turn in Internet Scholarship, Christopher Yoo
Monroe E. Price is Director of the Center for Global Communication
Studies at the Annenberg School for the University of Pennsylvania
and Joseph and Sadie Danciger Professor of Law and Director of the
Howard M. Squadron Program in Law, Media and Society at the Cardozo
School of Law.
Stefaan Verhulst is Chief of Research at the Markle Foundation.
Previously he was the co-founder and co-director, with Professor
Monroe Price, of the Programme in Comparative Media Law and Policy
(PCMLP) at Oxford University, as well as senior research fellow at
the Centre for Socio Legal Studies.
Libby Morgan is the Associate Director of the Center for
Global Communication Studies at the Annenberg School for the
University of Pennsylvania.
'In our digital age, understanding the landscape of media law is
essential not just to legal experts, but to companies, policy
makers, and the public at large. This is simply the best book on
the market; informed, rich, elucidating and full of insights.
Highly recommended!' Viktor Mayer-Schönberger, Professor of
Internet Governance and Regulation, University of Oxford, UK'Media
law is a key aspect of the fast increasing role of the media in our
ever more interconnected world. Understanding the rapidly evolving
legal frameworks that govern the media across the globe is vital.
Researchers, policymakers, and activists alike could not wish for a
better resource than the Routledge Handbook of Media Law. Its
first-rate contributors provide a comprehensive and authoritative
tour d´horizon of a fascinating field. The comparative and
multi-disciplinary perspective is thoroughly compelling and enables
us to understand how media law, society and politics constitute
each other.' Wolfgang Reinicke, Founding Dean, School of Public
Policy, Central European University, Budapest and President, Global
Public Policy Institute, Berlin
'In our digital age, understanding the landscape of media law is
essential not just to legal experts, but to companies, policy
makers, and the public at large. This is simply the best book on
the market; informed, rich, elucidating and full of insights.
Highly recommended!' Viktor Mayer-Schönberger, Professor of
Internet Governance and Regulation, University of Oxford, UK'Media
law is a key aspect of the fast increasing role of the media in our
ever more interconnected world. Understanding the rapidly evolving
legal frameworks that govern the media across the globe is vital.
Researchers, policymakers, and activists alike could not wish for a
better resource than the Routledge Handbook of Media Law. Its
first-rate contributors provide a comprehensive and authoritative
tour d´horizon of a fascinating field. The comparative and
multi-disciplinary perspective is thoroughly compelling and enables
us to understand how media law, society and politics constitute
each other.' Wolfgang Reinicke, Founding Dean, School of Public
Policy, Central European University, Budapest and President, Global
Public Policy Institute, Berlin'The editors of the Routledge
Handbook of Media Law have sold themselves short by marketing their
work as a mere “handbook.” More compendium than synopsis, the work
offers thirty treatises and research papers on global media law and
policy from a comparative and socio-legal perspective.' Arthur S.
Hayes, Fordham University, Bronx, NY, USA for Journalism & Mass
Communication Quarterly
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