ABSTRACT

Magazine Law is a comprehensive guide to the law for magazine journalists, editors and managers. Written by a barrister experienced in publishing and copyright law and a former magazine journalist and law lecturer, the book addresses the special needs of the magazine industry and explains the laws that regulate and seek to determine what journalists can and cannot publish, and how these laws are applied in everyday situations.
Written specifically for all those in the magazine industry, as well as students of magazine journalism, the authors address issues which directly affect day to day practice. The legal and regulatory framework is illustrated with case studies and up-to-date examples of precedent setting cases.
Topics covered include:
* the legal process and the distinction between criminal and civil law
* the role of the courts and reporting court procedure
* defamation, fair-comment and libel
* product testing and criticism
* copyright and passing off
* law for photographers, picture researchers and the use of illustrations
* privacy and trespass
* competition, lotteries and magazine promotion
* sub-editing errors and inaccurate copy
* ethical and professional issues facing journalists
Codes of Practice published by the Press Complaints Commission and National Union of Journalists are set out in appendices, as are requirements for the award of a National Vocational Qualification in Periodical Journalism in Press Law and Ethics. A glossary of legal terms is included.

chapter 2|10 pages

It's a matter of reputation

chapter 4|6 pages

Handling court copy

chapter 5|7 pages

A degree of privilege

chapter 6|6 pages

‘In my opinion…’

chapter 7|6 pages

When you put it to the test

chapter 9|9 pages

Don't be held in contempt

chapter 10|8 pages

Strictly confidential

chapter 12|6 pages

A question of morals

chapter 13|7 pages

Some pitfalls for sub-editors

chapter 14|4 pages

When a reader complains

chapter 15|7 pages

What do I do if…?

chapter 16|6 pages

Making it practical