Abstract

Foreword - Baroness O'Neill of Bengarve Introduction - Julian Petley 1.To Punish, Inform and Criticize: The Goals of Naming and Shaming - Jacob Rowbottom, Oxford University 2.Public Interest or Public Shaming - Julian Petley, Brunel University 3.The Right of the Press to Know or the Individual Right to Privacy - Brian Chama, Roehampton University 4.Privacy and the Freedom of the Press: A False Dichotomy - Simon Dawes, Nottingham Trent University 5.Disclosure and Public Shaming in the Digital Age - Hanne Detel, Eberhard Karls Universitat Tubingen, 6.Public Shaming of Individuals and Companies through Social Media - Desislava Manova-Georgieva, Sofia University 7.Differences in Self-disclosure among Cultures: A Comparative Study in Social Networking -Jingwei Wu, Free University Berlin 8.Comparing Crime Rituals in Sweden, Holland, England, and North America - Romayne Smith Fullerton, University of Western Ontario and Maggie Jones Patterson, Duquesne University 9.The DSK Scandal: Mediating the Desire for Authenticity - Julia Lefkowitz, American University Paris 10.Public Interest and Individual Taste in Reporting an Irish Minister's Illness - Kevin Rafter, Dublin City University 11.Public Figures, Privacy and Co-regulation: The David Campbell Affair - Tim Dwyer, University of Sydney 12.Naming and Shaming an Innocent Man: Allegations Against John Leslie - Adrian Quinn, Leeds University 13.British Journalism after the News of the World - John Lloyd, Financial Times and Reuters Institute

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