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  • The future of press regulation: Law Society webinar

    Carl Gardner
    May 31, 2013

    The Law Society asked me recently to take part in a webinar to discuss the future of press regulation with the Law Society Gazette’s news editor Michael Cross – and the webinar’s now available online for free, if you […]

  • Theresa May’s treaty with Jordan: this is the game-changer she needs

    Carl Gardner
    April 24, 2013

    A day after the Court of Appeal refused her permission to appeal to the Supreme Court in the Abu Qatada case, Theresa May’s announcement today of a mutual legal assistance treaty with Jordan seems finally to turn the case […]

  • Media Reform Coalition consults bloggers and small publishers on press regulation

    Carl Gardner
    April 4, 2013

    The Media Reform Coalition has spotted that the current proposals in the Crime and Courts Bill, inserted at the last minute to give statutory backing to the press self-regulation system the main parties have agreed on, may not work properly […]

  • Crime and Courts Bill: the press regulation provisions

    Carl Gardner
    March 29, 2013

    Parliament hasn’t yet published a text of the Crime and Courts Bill taking account of the recent Commons and Lords amendments dealing with press regulation. But seeing the provisions as they stand today may help discussion of the proposed system […]

  • The press regulation jigsaw’s missing piece: writers

    Carl Gardner
    March 28, 2013

    In Monday’s Lords debate about the new press regulation provisions inserted into the Crime and Courts Bill, one line stands out above all. Discussing an amendment about the vicarious liability of publishers, justice minister Lord McNally said (column 876):

    the […]

    Tags: freedom of expression, legislation, media law, parliament
  • Press regulation: the international aspect

    Carl Gardner
    March 26, 2013

    An exchange in last night’s Lords debate on the new press regulation clauses in the Crime and Courts Bill revealed a little-noticed – and no doubt to some, astonishing – aspect of the proposed system: it covers foreign publishers.

    Lord […]

    Tags: eu law, freedom of expression, human rights, international, legislation, media law, parliament
  • Costs protection for regulated publishers in the Crime and Courts Bill: a small analgesic

    Carl Gardner
    March 26, 2013

    I wrote the other day that I was confused about a new clause inserted into the Crime and Courts Bill, as a result of cross-party agreement on press regulation. As originally drafted it protected regulated publishers from costs awards […]

  • Why press regulation should cover blogs

    Carl Gardner
    March 24, 2013

    In my last post, I said I was worried that the press self-regulation scheme agreed by the main political parties (and to be underpinned by a Royal Charter and two pieces of legislation) would not offer bloggers what it offers […]

    Tags: freedom of expression, media law
  • The Leveson Royal Charter deal

    Carl Gardner
    March 23, 2013

    Just before Lord Justice Leveson reported in November, I wrote in support of statutory press regulation:

    Only legislation can require newspapers to submit even to their own enforcement of their own code …

    What statute – and no other arrangement – […]

    Tags: constitution, freedom of expression, government, media law, parliament, private life
  • The Winslow Boy

    Carl Gardner
    March 22, 2013

    Charlie Rowe as Ronnie Winslow. Photo: Nobby ClarkCharlie Rowe as Ronnie Winslow | Photo: Nobby Clark

    Terence Rattigan’s famous play, about a father’s fight for justice for his son, was first staged in […]

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