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Justices and Journalists: The Global Perspective

Justices and Journalists: The Global Perspective

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Richard Davis
Cambridge University Press
Edition: Reprint, 5/10/2018
EAN 9781316612637, ISBN10: 1316612635

Paperback, 330 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.9 cm
Language: English

A key intermediary between courts and the public are the journalists who monitor the actions of justices and report their decisions, pronouncements, and proclivities. Justices and Journalists: The Global Perspective is the first volume of its kind - a comparative analysis of the relationship between supreme courts and the press who cover them. Understanding this relationship is critical in a digital media age when government transparency is increasingly demanded by the public and judicial actions are the subject of press and public scrutiny. Richard Davis and David Taras take a comparative look at how justices in countries around the world relate to the media, the interactive points between the courts and the press, the roles of television and the digital media, and the future of the relationship.

Introduction. Judges and journalists and the spaces in-between David Taras
1. Judicial communication
(re)constructing legitimacy in Argentina Druscilla Scribner
2. The Australian High Court, speaking for itself, but not tweeting Rachel Spencer
3. Uncommon transparency
the Supreme Court, media relations, and public opinion in Brazil Matthew Ingram
4. The 'uncomfortable embrace'
the Supreme Court and the media in Canada Susan Harada
5. Germany
the Federal Constitutional Court and the media Christina Holtz-Bacha
6. The Supreme Court and media in Ghana's Fourth Republic
an analysis of rulings and interactions between two estates of the realm Winston Tettey
7. The puzzle of judicial communication in Indonesia
the media, the court, and the Chief Justice Stefanus Hendrianto
8. Carping, criticizing, and circumventing
judges, the Supreme Court, and the media in Israel Bryna Bogoch
9. Judicial communication in South Korea
moving toward a more open system? Ahran Park and Kyu Ho Youm
10. Changing the channel
broadcasting deliberations in the Mexican Supreme Court Francisca Pou
11. Norway
managed openness and transparency Eric N. Waltenburg, Gunnar Grendstad and William R. Shaffer
12. Judicial institutional change and court communication innovations
the case of the UK Supreme Court Les Moran
13. Symbiosis
the US Supreme Court and the journalists who cover it Richard Davis
Conclusion Richard Davis.