
Essential Principles of Communications Law
Donald E. Lively(Author)
Praeger Publishers Inc
Published on 30. September 1991
Book
Hardback
336 pages
978-0-275-93912-0 (ISBN)
Description
Rapid changes in communications technology continue to characterize the industry and to necessitate repeated redefinition of the legal structures and issues which must respond to these changes. Donald E. Lively's in-depth study of communications law clarifies its basic concepts and principles. He provides a thorough survey of the press as it was originally perceived by the Constitution and how its profile has changed due to the sophisticated nature of today's media. The book shows how broadcasting, cable, and common carriage disperse a wide range of information--requiring continual monitoring to preserve the balance between responsibility and freedom of the press.
This complex issue is first studied from a broad conceptual perspective that reviews the original constitutional and non-constitutional concerns of the first amendment, followed by an analysis of how the structures of the newspaper, broadcasting, cable and common carrier industries have been regulated, and concludes with a history and evaluation of the guidelines which restrict the quantity and quality of content. The identification of trends in the ownership of twentieth century information sources and the effect of the current decentralization of ownership on the public's access to information are fully examined, and the law's continually evolving attention to the changing dynamics within the industry evaluated for the present and projected for the future.
This complex issue is first studied from a broad conceptual perspective that reviews the original constitutional and non-constitutional concerns of the first amendment, followed by an analysis of how the structures of the newspaper, broadcasting, cable and common carrier industries have been regulated, and concludes with a history and evaluation of the guidelines which restrict the quantity and quality of content. The identification of trends in the ownership of twentieth century information sources and the effect of the current decentralization of ownership on the public's access to information are fully examined, and the law's continually evolving attention to the changing dynamics within the industry evaluated for the present and projected for the future.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
United States
Publishing group
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Target group
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 240 mm
Width: 161 mm
Thickness: 25 mm
Weight
728 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-275-93912-0 (9780275939120)
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Schweitzer Classification
Person
DONALD E. LIVELY is Professor of Law at the University of Toledo. He teaches and writes on communications law and has authored Modern Communications Law (Praeger, 1991). He has also published extensively on First Amendment issues in law reviews and journals.
Content
Preface The Nature And Law of Media The Origins and Nature of the First Amendment Freedom of the Press: Basic Operational Terms and Conditions Freedom of the Press and Competing Considerations Economic Regulation of the Media Industry Structural Regulation of the Media The Newspaper Industry The Broadcasting Industry The Cable Industry The Common Carrier Industry Content Regulation Of The Media The Print Media Broadcasting Content Restriction Cable Common Carriers Appendix A: New Technologies Appendix B: Communications Act of 1934 Appendix C: Glossary Table of Cases Index