elizabeth Sinclair
School of Law, University of Wollongong

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GOVERNMENTAL CONTROL ON JURNALISTIC PRACTICE IN 'PSEUDO-DEMOCRATIC' MALAYSIA AND SINGAPORE OR BIG COMPANY CONTROL ON JOURNALISTIC PRACTICE IN 'ESTABLISHED-DEMOCRATIC' AUSTRALIA: WHICH IS WORSE AND WHERE ARE THE PARALLESL Sinclair, Elizabeth
Brawijaya Law Journal Vol 2, No 1 (S) (2015): Contemporary Issues in South-East Asia Countries
Publisher : Faculty of Law, Universitas Brawijaya

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | Full PDF (356.909 KB) | DOI: 10.21776/ub.blj.2015.002.01.04

Abstract

Amanda Whiting and Timothy Marjoribanks argued in their chapter Media professional’s perceptions of defamation and other constraints upon news reporting in Malaysia and Singapore[1]that Malaysia and Singapore experience, due to a number of factors, restricted media freedom - many of these factors relating to the semi-democratic nature of Malaysian and Singaporean government.[1]Amanda Whiting and Timothy Marjoribanks, ‘Media Professionals' Perceptions of Defamation and other Constraints upon News Reporting in Malaysia and Singapore’ in Andrew Kenyon, Tim Marjoribanks, Amanda Whiting (eds.) Democracy, Media and Law in Malaysia and Singapore (Routledge, London, 2013), 129-156.