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Campus: Kensington Campus
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Career: Undergraduate
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Units of Credit: 6
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Indicative Contact Hours per Week: 3
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Enrolment Requirements:
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Prerequisite: LAWS1001 and LAWS1011 and Corequisite: LAWS2311; Prerequisite: JURD7101 and JURD7111 and Corequisite: JURD7211
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Excluded: JURD7421
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Description
This course focuses on the principal legal areas affecting media (press and broadcasting) content. An underlying theme of the course will be the relationship between free speech and the legal restrictions imposed upon the media. It is a companion course to Laws 3222, Communications Law: Broadcasting and Telecommunications. You will find also that the course builds on your knowledge of a variety of legal topics already studied in your programme, such as, for example, torts, criminal law, and constitutional law, but requires you to rethink these areas from the perspective of how they impact upon media as they carry out their roles of reporting and commenting.
Recommended Prior Knowledge
None
Course Objectives
The aims of the course are to:
- Enable students to develop an understanding of free speech protection in
- Australia, and the claims of media to free speech protection
- Provide students with an understanding of laws which can affect media
- content
- Enable students to develop an appreciation of how claims to free speech are
- balanced with competing interests such as privacy and the proper
- administration of justice
- Become familiar with the policy debates and reform discussions relating to the
- specific legal topics covered in the course
Having completed this course, students should be:
- Familiar with the theoretical arguments for free speech, and have an understanding of how free speech is protected in Australia
- Able to analyse critically the claims of the media to free speech protection
- Familiar with the laws which affect media content
- Able to form a reasoned view on the balance between free speech and competing interests
- Evaluate the policy debates and approaches to reform concerning the legal issues covered in this course such as defamation and privacy
- Apply their knowledge of the areas of law covered in the course to solve relevant legal problems
Main Topics
- Freedom of speech and the media: free speech - basic principles; free speech and media freedom
- Newsgathering and communications: defamation; breach of confidence and privacy; journalistic sources including FOI
- Reporting legal and political matters: reporting of legal proceedings; contempt of court; reporting of Parliament and other political material
Assessment
Class participation |
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20% |
Research essay |
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40% |
Take-home examination |
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40% |
Course Texts
- David Rolph, Matt Vitins and Judith Bannister, Media Law: Cases & Commentary (OUP: South Melbourne, 2010).
Recommended As the course proceeds, additional references which you may find useful will be posted on the WebCT course site. A number of web sites will provide useful resources for this course, and you will find links to them via WebCT.
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