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Articles 1 - 3 of 3
Full-Text Articles in Law
Public Awareness Of Human Rights: Distortions In The Mass Media, Eric Heinze, Rosa Freedman
Public Awareness Of Human Rights: Distortions In The Mass Media, Eric Heinze, Rosa Freedman
Prof. Eric Heinze, Queen Mary University of London
This article examines distortions of human rights reporting in the mass media. We examine human rights coverage in four of the most influential newspapers, two from the US and two from the UK. The US papers are The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal. The British papers are The Financial Times and The Guardian.
Most current scholarship on international human rights draws its information from specialized sources, such as the published reports of intergovernmental and non-governmental organisations. Wholly absent has been any systematic study of the mass media. To date, no one has examined the dominant media agencies, …
Book Review, Eric Heinze
Book Review, Eric Heinze
Prof. Eric Heinze, Queen Mary University of London
Book Review of: MURRAY DRY. Civil Peace and the Quest for Truth: The First Amendment Freedoms in Political Philosophy and American Constitutionalism. Lanham, Maryland: Lexington Books, 2004. x, 307 pp. $88.00 (cloth); 29.95 (paper). Murray Dry attempts to draw a number of links between the ‘speech’ and ‘religion’ clauses of the First Amendment. Unfortunately, he fails in a number of respects. He confuses core elements of the Establishment and Free Exercise Clauses, and fails to examine Freedom of Speech within the context of fundamental controversies that have arisen throughout the post-World War II era. The errors he makes stand as …
Book Review, Eric Heinze
Book Review, Eric Heinze
Prof. Eric Heinze, Queen Mary University of London
Book Review: Randall Baldwin Clark, "The Law Most Beautiful and Best: Medical Argument and Magical Rhetoric in Plato’s Laws", Lexington Books, 2004 (pp. 178 + xiv) Randall Clark has distinguished himself among a growing number of scholars taking a new look at theories of law in ancient Greek texts. The review examines a number of original features of Clark’s approach, and shows how the book sheds new light on important themes in Plato’s Republic and Laws.