Main content

Rise of the superinjunction

David Hayward

is a video consultant. Twitter: @david_hbm

Tagged with:

Tuesday 13 April 2010, Frontline Club, London.

It's one of the world's oldest surviving democracies, but just how free is the British media?

Law firms can and do serve newsdesks with so-called superinjunctions banning all mention of their client or of the writ itself. Lawyers acting for the footballer John Terry and the oil trader Trafigura both tried this tactic to stop unfavourable coverage - only for the facts to eventually trickle into the public domain.

Are these strong-arm tactics a threat to press freedom? Or simply an inevitable response to the irresponsible, scandal-obsessed British newspapers? And, more importantly, how can lawyers and judges expect to keep allegations secret when it only takes one person and a broadband connection to publish them around the world in seconds.

To debate this and more, the Frontline Club and the BBC College of Journalism are delighted to welcome Guardian investigations editor David Leigh, the Carter Ruck partner Nigel Tait, science writer Simon Singh and David Hooper, a media law specialist and partner at Reynolds Porter Chamberlain, to an event chaired by Clive Coleman, presenter of BBC Radio 4's Law in Action programme and a former barrister.

Click here for more details.

Tagged with:

Blog comments will be available here in future. Find out more.

More Posts

Previous

Guest blog: where was the balance?

Next

Britain's got politics