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Internet Child Pornography and the Law
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Internet Child Pornography and the Law
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by Yaman Akdeniz
Sales Rank : 1294183
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Hardcover: 326 pages
Publisher: Ashgate May 2008
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0754622975
ISBN-13: 978-0754622970
Product Dimensions:
9.3 x 6.2 x 1 inches
Shipping Weight: 1.7 pounds
Product Review
'In Internet Child Pornography and The Law, Yaman Akdeniz does an excellent job of applying responsible, thoughtful, scholarship to a subject often surrounded by misinformation. This is an important book for anyone interested in understanding how law and legal thinking must be reshaped to respond to globalization and new technologies.' -- Philip Jenkins, Pennsylvania State University, USA
'Yaman Akdeniz's book is an important and timely contribution to this area of research. It brings a coherent perspective to an otherwise fragmented, and at times contradictory, arena and provides a balanced perspective on what has become an increasingly emotive topic. This will be an invaluable source of information to all whose work relates to child pornography and will help inform both practitioners and policy makers.' -- Ethel Quayle, University College Cork, Ireland
Product Description
This book sets out to provide a critical assessment of the problem of Internet child pornography and its governance through legal and non-legal means, including a comparative assessment of laws in England and Wales, the United States of America and Canada in recognition that governments have a compelling interest to protect children from sexual abuse and exploitation. The Internet raises novel and complex challenges to existing regulatory regimes. Efforts towards legal harmonization at the European Union, Council of Europe, and United Nations level are examined in this context and the utility of additional and alternative methods of regulation explored. This book argues that effective implementation, enforcement and harmonization of laws could substantially help to reduce the availability and dissemination of child pornography on the Internet. At the same time, panic-led policies must be avoided if the wider problems of child sexual abuse and commercial sexual exploitation are to be meaningfully addressed.
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