Provides comprehensive coverage across both media and entertainment law curricula including TV and radio broadcasting, the print press, online news and entertainment, music and social networking sites - making it the ideal fit for any course related to media and entertainment law, and for use alongside McNae's Essential Law for Journalists on journalism law courses.
By far the most up to date and comprehensive textbook on this subject on the market.
Includes many useful features including 'for thought' boxes, intended to encourage discussion on topical issues and help students to critique current law and reflect on where the law may develop in the future.
Contains detailed reference to case law and statutes and is updated with all recent developments including the report on Martin Bashir's interview with Diana, Princess of Wales, changes in IP Law and data protection law post-Brexit, and social media and election law.
Sections on Scots Law makes the book extremely relevant for all media law courses in Scotland.
This edition will be the first to be supported by a companion website.
Ursula Smartt is Associate Professor of Law at Northeastern University London, UK and Boston, USA, and Researcher in Media and Entertainment Law at the University of Surrey.
Title: Media & Entertainment Law
Author: Smartt, Ursula
ISBN: 9781032168715
Binding:
Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
Publication Date: 2022-11-29
Number of Pages: 596
Weight: 1.4383 kg
The depth of coverage in Ursula Smartt's Media & Entertainment Law is striking, focussing throughout on detailed case law analysis, the media's right to freedom of expression and the individual's right to privacy. Her style of writing is extremely readable and yet legally accurate, as every relevant case has been studied in detail from original court reports. She brings many 'double gagging' orders (super injunctions) to life and illustrates how the law differs in parts of the UK by highlighting the 'outing' of some celebrities and sports personalities by the press north of the border, where English injunctions were not applicable in the Scottish jurisdiction.
Baroness Helena Kennedy QC
In the past 25 years, so much expansion has taken place in legal activities potentially affecting the media, emerging quite slowly from such trigger legislation as the Human Rights Act 1998, the Protection from Harassment Act 1997 and the Data Protection Act 1998. The contents page of Ursula Smartt's fifth edition of Media & Entertainment Law shows the sheer scale of the task for an academic author covering the modern-day spectrum of activity in this field of law. Smartt brings to the task learning as well as a dynamic and approachable style.
Adrienne Page QC, Joint Head of Chambers of 5RB
Ursula Smartt's book has few if any rivals and to obtain the accumulated knowledge and the analysis found within it would necessitate the buying of several books on the topics falling under the category of Media and Entertainment Law. One of the strengths of Smartt's Media & Entertainment Law is its ability to cross academic discipline boundaries. There is in particular very good comparison of cases in international jurisdictions as well as very detailed analysis and observation about UK media law and regulation. Many academics teaching and supervising research will find this element of the book exceptionally useful. There are many useful diagrams which are always a good learning aid. The intellectual property law chapters are the most detailed and information filled chapters in what is a remarkably detailed book.
Barry Turner, Senior Lecturer in Media Law, Lincoln School of Film, Media and Journalism, University of Lincoln