
Media Law in Germany
Description
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An introduction describing the main actors and salient aspects of media markets is followed by in-depth analyses of print media, radio and television broadcasting, the Internet, commercial communications, political advertising, concentration in media markets, and media regulation. Among the topics that arise for discussion are privacy, cultural policy, protection of minors, competition policy, access to digital gateways, protection of journalists' sources, standardization and interoperability, and liability of intermediaries. Relevant case law is considered throughout, as are various ethical codes.
A clear, comprehensive overview of media legislation, case law, and doctrine, presented from the practitioner's point of view, this book is a valuable time-saving resource for all concerned with media and communication freedom. Lawyers representing parties with interests in Germany will welcome this very useful guide, and academics and researchers will appreciate its value in the study of comparative media law.
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Content
- Intro
- The Author
- List of Abbreviations
- Preface
- General Introduction
- Part I. Fundamental Rights of the German Constitution Protecting Media
- Chapter 1. Overview of the Constitutional Protection of Communication and Media
- Chapter 2. Freedom of Speech
- §1. Scope of Application of Freedom of Speech
- §2. Limits of Freedom of Speech
- Chapter 3. Freedom of Information
- Chapter 4. Freedom of Media
- Chapter 5. Freedom of the Press
- §1. Overview
- §2. Different Rights Deriving from Freedom of the Press
- I. Confidentiality of the Editorial Work
- II. Informants Protection
- III. Right to Refuse to Testify
- IV. Informative Demanding
- V. Spread of Unlawfully Obtained Material
- VI. Trend Protection
- VII. Negative Freedom of the Press
- VIII. Inclusion of Advertisements
- §3. Device Warranty of the Press
- §4. Limits of the Freedom of the Press
- §5. Assessment of the Balance with Other Fundamental Rights
- Chapter 6. Broadcasting Freedom
- §1. Overview
- §2. Basics of the Freedom of Broadcasting in the Interpretation of the Constitutional Court
- Chapter 7. Fundamental Rights of Multimedia
- Chapter 8. Additional Fundamental Rights of Relevance to Media
- §1. Artistic Freedom
- §2. Freedom of Science
- §3. Freedom of Occupation
- §4. Freedom of Property
- §5. Human Dignity
- Part II. Regulation of Print Media
- Chapter 1. The Journalists' Profession
- Chapter 2. Journalists' Rights
- §1. Role of Journalists as Watchdogs of Society
- §2. Journalist's Independence
- §3. Protection of Journalistic Sources
- Chapter 3. Journalists' Liability
- §1. Material Damage
- §2. Moral Damage
- §3. Defamation, Libel and Slander
- §4. Personality Rights
- I. Constitutional Protection of the Personality Right
- II. Privacy
- III. Right to One's Own Image
- IV. Spoken and Written Word
- V. Right to Data Protection
- VI. Confidentiality and Integrity of Information Systems
- VII. Legal Persons
- VIII. Postmortem Personality Rights
- Chapter 4. Right to Reply
- Chapter 5. Other Civil Means of Media Victims
- §1. Injunction
- §2. Correction
- Chapter 6. Access to Public Information
- §1. Press Laws
- §2. Freedom of Information Act
- §3. Court Hearings
- Chapter 7. Press Council
- Part III. Regulation of Audiovisual Media (Broadcasting)
- Chapter 1. Public Service Broadcasting
- §1. The Concept and Mission of Public Service Broadcasting
- §2. The Organization of Public Service Broadcasting
- I. Broadcasting Council
- II. Board of Directors
- III. Director
- §3. The Financing of Public Service Broadcasting
- I. Broadcasting Fees
- II. Mixed Financing
- III. Ratio of Broadcasting Contribution to Other Funding Sources
- Chapter 2. Private Broadcasting
- §1. Conditions for Private Broadcasting
- §2. Licensing Requirements
- Chapter 3. Program Standards
- §1. Impartiality
- §2. Cultural Diversity
- §3. Protection of Minors (Indecency and Violence)
- §4. Human Dignity
- §5. Right to Reply
- Chapter 4. Political Broadcasting
- §1. Rules on Political Independence of Broadcasters
- §2. Fair Representation in Election Periods
- §3. News and Current Affairs Programs
- §4. Political Advertising
- Chapter 5. Advertising Rules
- §1. Various Forms of Commercial Communications
- §2. Restrictions on Content
- §3. Time and Frequency Restrictions
- §4. Sponsorship
- §5. Product Placement
- Chapter 6. Right to Information
- §1. Access to Mayor Events
- §2. Short News Reporting
- Chapter 7. Access to Networks
- §1. Must-Carry Rules
- §2. Other Access Obligations for Networks
- Chapter 8. Standards and Interoperability
- Part IV. Cross Ownership Regulation
- Part V. Supervision: Media Regulator
- Chapter 1. Organization
- Chapter 2. Tasks
- Chapter 3. Sanctioning Powers
- Selected Bibliography
- Index
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