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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A
3 page paper which summarizes and briefly analyzes “Insult to Injury: Libel, Slander, and
Invasion of Privacy” by William K. Jones. No additional sources cited.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAinsult.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Chapters 1-4, discusses the various aspects of conflict concerning the First Amendment. In these chapters he investigates many aspects of the controversies. In Parts Two and Three, which are covered
in Chapters 5 through 21, he presents the reader with the records of the courts. He presents both the Supreme Court documents as well as local court documents. What Jones
is attempting to do in this particular portion of the work is to examine how the decisions of the Supreme Court, or their limited pronouncements, are often applied, through practice,
by the lower courts in the nation. This provides the power to the guidelines, not rulings, presented by the Supreme Court. The author also examines the various aspects of the
courts involvement in trying to understand where law is strengthened for the good and where individual rights may be violated. In many cases Jones finds that there are many
instances where such a balance is not maintained and in this he begins to propose possible solutions that could achieve a generally beneficial relationship. In Part Four, chapters 22-26, he
presents a more radical approach that he believes would bring about such balance. He uses much of the information he has presented in the first two parts of the work
to further support his theories. In Part Five of the work he discusses and examines the real laws concerning privacy. It is here that he engages in discussions concerning
how many people have felt violated through improper procedural adherence. In Chapter 27, specifically, he discusses the evolution of the right to privacy and in the next two chapters he
focuses on public disclosure of otherwise private facts. In the last part of his book he offers up two chapters that essentially pull into conclusion all that he has argued
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