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The Handbook of Communication Rights, Law, and Ethics
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Страница 1
Handbooks in Communication and Media
Handbook of Communication Rights, Law, and Ethics Seeking Universality, Equality, Freedom and Dignity
Страница 4
Страница 5
Preface
Strategic Infrastructures
Strategic Narratives
Markets for Loyalties and this Volume
Notes
Introduction
Страница 12
1 Freedom as the Essential Basis for Communication Rights
The Existence of Freedom Prior to Rights and States
From Freedom of Expression to Communication Rights
Freedom of Expression Lies at the Foundation of Communication Rights
The Long and Difficult Road to Communication Rights
International Agreements on Human Rights: The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
Other Declarations to Consider
Conclusion: The UDHR as the Basis for Modern Communication Rights
References
Notes
2 Dignity, a Revolutionary Principle in a Cosmopolitan Society
The History of Dignity
Dignity in Kant
Dignity is What Gets in the Way
Egalitarian Dignity
Inviolable but Violated a Thousand Times
A Conclusion and a Proposal: Cosmopolitan Dignity
Egalitarianism Leads Straight to Cosmopolitanism
References
3 Communication Rights in an Internet-Based Society Why Is the Principle of Universality
So Important
?
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Threats to Communication Rights Arising from the Internet and Its Universal or Mass Nature
Who is the “Universal Subject” in the Information Society, and what Rights does this Subject Possess?
Related Universal Rights
Notes on the Technical Universality of Communication Rights: The Universality of Internet-Based Modes of Expression
Return to First Principles: Inalienable Content of the Rights to Seek, Receive, and Impart Information
The Right to Seek Information
The Right to Receive Information
The Right to Impart Information
Conclusions
References
Notes
4 Communication Rights in the United Nations System From Declarations to “Soft Law”
The First Steps: Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
Consolidation: Article 19 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and Its Interpretation by the Human Rights Committee
The Present and the Future: Soft Law and Challenges Faced by the United Nations in the Defense of Communication Rights
Conclusion
References
Notes
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