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Freedom of press

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Allahabad; Law book company; 1989Description: 134 pSubject(s): DDC classification:
  • 342.0853 CHA
Summary: The pleasing, perplexing concept of the Freedom of Press has throughout been a thing of topical interest not only to those concerned with the study of the Constitution but also to the journalists, the Parliamen tarians and the Politicians. The treatise in hand promises to be a mature work on the subject written in an exquisitely lucid style, tracing the principles and philosophy of the subject from all angles and dwelling in detail on the constitutional provisions. The present mess of information through unending literature, making a modern man almost erratic, required conceivably, a yet more precise extent and still a legitimate limitation of this concept to be analysed, assessed and evaluated, and this is exactly what the treatise in hand has acquitted itself profitably well in doing. A free and frank discussion on the subject has been studded with observations from uptodate judicial pronouncements and the style is rich in versatility of expression and chastity of language, making thereby the work a perfect blend of juristic approach and a research acumen on matrix of a traditional commentary style, exhibiting the real original genius of the learned authors who have grasped and geared the subject into six rubrics, discussing the subject as a fundamental right, discerning its constitutional significance, dealing with all its aspects and limitations, and covering all its residuary aspects with a final focus on its illusions and ambiguities. Spread on such wide canvas, the whole is a thoughtful essay valuable to all concerned with the subject.
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The pleasing, perplexing concept of the Freedom of Press has throughout been a thing of topical interest not only to those concerned with the study of the Constitution but also to the journalists, the Parliamen tarians and the Politicians. The treatise in hand promises to be a mature work on the subject written in an exquisitely lucid style, tracing the principles and philosophy of the subject from all angles and dwelling in detail on the constitutional provisions.

The present mess of information through unending literature, making a modern man almost erratic, required conceivably, a yet more precise extent and still a legitimate limitation of this concept to be analysed, assessed and evaluated, and this is exactly what the treatise in hand has acquitted itself profitably well in doing.

A free and frank discussion on the subject has been studded with observations from uptodate judicial pronouncements and the style is rich in versatility of expression and chastity of language, making thereby the work a perfect blend of juristic approach and a research acumen on matrix of a traditional commentary style, exhibiting the real original genius of the learned authors who have grasped and geared the subject into six rubrics, discussing the subject as a fundamental right, discerning its constitutional significance, dealing with all its aspects and limitations, and covering all its residuary aspects with a final focus on its illusions and ambiguities.

Spread on such wide canvas, the whole is a thoughtful essay valuable to all concerned with the subject.

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