Search for: "Rowbottom v. State" Results 1 - 12 of 12
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17 Dec 2018, 4:21 pm by INFORRM
Two recent decisions, Economou v de Freitas and Doyle v Smith, provide some guidance on this question, but seem to pull in slightly different directions. [read post]
14 Jan 2015, 4:46 pm by INFORRM
The US Supreme Court rejected such an argument in Arkansas Educational Television Commission v Forbes (1998). [read post]
17 Feb 2015, 5:41 am by INFORRM
The 2004 decision of the House of Lords in Campbell v Mirror Group Newspapers ([2004] 2 AC 457) was a significant case regarding privacy, and for human rights law and tort law more generally. [read post]
20 Dec 2011, 4:13 pm by Rick Hasen
, Election Law Journal (forthcoming 2011) (draft available) Citizens United and the Orphaned Antidistortion Rationale, 27 Georgia State Law Review 989 (2011) (symposium on Citizens United) The Nine Lives of Buckley v. [read post]
24 Dec 2016, 5:31 am by INFORRM
 We have had over 450,000 page views this year, more than half from the UK with the United States, Australia, Hong Kong and Ireland making up the rest of the top five. [read post]
22 Dec 2017, 2:35 am by INFORRM
 We have had over 400,000 page views this year, more than half from the UK with the United States, Australia, Malaysia and India making up the rest of the top five. [read post]
8 Dec 2010, 2:54 am by Adam Wagner
 And, now that election decisions can be judicially reviewed, the decisions could ultimately reach the Supreme Court – echoing the United States Supreme Court decision in Bush v Gore a decade ago – or even the European Court of Human Rights on freedom of expression grounds. [read post]
19 May 2019, 4:15 pm by INFORRM
Jacob Rowbottom and Richard Wingfield. [read post]
19 Sep 2019, 10:01 am
The constitutional importance of this point is clear: in R (on the application of Bancoult) v Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, which was cited by Lord Pannick on behalf of Gina Miller during his oral submissions, Lord Hoffmann held that ‘the unique authority Parliament derives from its representative character’. [read post]
29 Apr 2013, 9:36 am by INFORRM
As reported by the Inquirer, a state appeals court “upheld the proposition that German privacy laws don’t apply to Facebook, and ruled that the Office of the Data Protection Commissioner (ULD) for the German state of Schleswig-Holstein has to accept that“. [read post]
15 Apr 2012, 10:55 pm by Wessen Jazrawi
Jacob Rowbottom on the Inforrm blog has answered this question, responding that s.4A has been applied to digital communications in a number of cases, indicating that writing on a social network from within the home can fall within the offence. [read post]
18 Jan 2016, 1:03 am by INFORRM
United States Lawyers for Ghislaine Maxwell, w [read post]